You open a Phase I to answer a simple question: do we need a Phase II, and what are the risks? Forty pages later, you are still hunting for those answers. The report is thorough, but the decision points are scattered. This is the friction in most acquisition workflows. Teams need a fast, consistent read that surfaces RECs, obligations, and the next move without rereading the whole document. Due Diligence ~5 min to run Create Phase I Environmental Tear Sheet Vic prompt Use Vic to review the attached Phase I ESA and produce a one-page environmental tear sheet. Purpose Reduces review time from roughly 60 minutes to about 5 minutes while surfacing the key environmental risks and required follow-up for faster underwriting decisions. Inputs Phase I Report Required Output Format Optional Additional Context Optional Outputs A one-page Phase I environmental tear sheet in Word or chat format that includes the Phase II verdict, a findings table, compliance obligations, property overview, and action items. Time saved Turns roughly an hour of manual work into about five minutes. How it works Give Vic the Phase I report. Include an output format if you want a Word document, plus any deal context. Then run: "Use Vic to review the attached Phase I ESA and produce a one-page environmental tear sheet." Vic reads the report and returns a one-page summary in Word or chat. It opens with a brief property overview so anyone on the deal can get oriented. It then states the Phase II verdict in plain language. No digging through conclusions or footnotes. The core is a findings table with RECs, CRECs, and HRECs, along with source and status details. Most teams rebuild this by hand for every deal. A standard format makes properties easy to compare without reworking each report. The tear sheet also flags ongoing obligations. These often hide in narrative sections. Pulling them into a dedicated section keeps compliance items visible during underwriting and into asset management. Vic includes up to three next steps, tied to the findings. For example: proceed with a Phase II, request additional records, or confirm conditions tied to a CREC. The list stays short so the team can act. The output is meant for real use. Drop it into your IC memo, send it to your lender, or file it with diligence as a quick reference. It cuts review time from about an hour to about five minutes and keeps key risks and follow-up in one place. There is a small but important shift here. Instead of treating the Phase I as something everyone reads end to end, treat it as a source that feeds a consistent summary. That consistency helps when you are juggling multiple deals and need clean comparisons. You can still read the full report. Most of the time, you need the call, the list of issues, and what to do next. This gives you that without the scavenger hunt.