You know the drill. A deal is ready for outreach and you need a one-pager that says enough to get calls, but not so much that you end up negotiating over email. You copy an old flyer, swap numbers, fix formatting, and try to keep sections consistent. The friction is not the thinking. It is the assembly. Getting the headline, location, plan, returns, structure, and ask to read cleanly on one page takes time you do not have. Marketing ~10 min to run Draft Deal Teaser One-Pager Vic prompt Use Vic to draft a deal teaser one-pager for this deal. Purpose Cuts drafting time from 60 minutes to 10 minutes. Produces consistent teasers that generate inbound calls without over-disclosing terms. Inputs Deal Facts Required Projected Returns Optional Offer Structure Optional Images Optional Brand Skill Or Assets Optional Output Format Optional Outputs A branded one-page PDF, slide, or Word document ready for distribution that contains all listed sections plus a confidentiality footer. Time saved Turns roughly an hour of manual work into about ten minutes. How it works You give Vic the deal facts and, if you have them, projected returns, offer structure, images, brand assets, and a preferred output format. Then run one command: "Use Vic to draft a deal teaser one-pager for this deal." Vic builds a one-page teaser in a clear order and keeps it within your brand or a set palette. The output has a headline snapshot that frames the opportunity, a location section with demographics, a tight business plan, and the key return metrics: projected IRR, equity multiple, cash-on-cash, and hold period. It also lays out the offer structure, minimum investment, and contact details, and adds a confidentiality footer. You get a branded PDF, slide, or Word document, ready to send. This is not a mini OM. The page is meant to prompt calls, not answer every question. That line matters. Investors can see the shape of the deal and the economics at a glance, but you are not publishing full PPM disclosure. The result is tighter outreach and fewer back-and-forth edits before you hit send. Consistency is the quiet win. Teasers drift across teams and deals. Headings change, numbers show up in three formats, and the story shifts each time. Vic applies a consistent structure and CRE number formatting so your materials look like they come from one shop, even when different people prepare them. The inputs are flexible. If you only have deal facts, Vic still produces a complete page and handles placeholders cleanly. If you include images and brand assets, the layout reflects them. If you specify an output format, you get that file type. The sections stay the same, so investors know where to look. Speed is the obvious benefit. Drafting a one-pager by hand can take about an hour once you include formatting and revisions. This task produces a finished draft in about ten minutes. Fast enough to keep up with live deals and still review before it goes out. Use it when a deal moves from internal work to market. Drop in your facts, returns, and structure, pick your format, and send a clean one-pager that does its job: get the right investors on the phone.