Every asset manager knows the week when plans are due. You pull numbers from last year’s deck, chase updated performance, and rewrite the same sections for each property. The result reads pieced together because it is. The drag is not the thinking. It is the assembly. Turning scattered analyses into a clean, consistent document with a clear hold or sell view eats most of the time. Asset Management ~30 min to run Build Asset Business Plan Vic prompt Use Vic to build an annual asset business plan for the 250,000 sf office asset at 400 Main Street. Purpose A human analyst needs roughly 480 minutes to compile the same document. CRE Agents completes the work in about 30 minutes using existing analyses and fills only genuine gaps. Inputs Asset Overview Required Prior Plan Optional Performance Data Optional Existing Analyses Optional Output Format Optional Brand Skill Or Assets Optional Outputs A branded Word document that includes the cover page, executive summary, all required plan sections, and supporting exhibits. Time saved Turns roughly 480 minutes of manual work into about 30 minutes. How it works You give Vic the materials you already have. The only required input is an asset overview. You can also include the prior plan, current performance data, and any analyses. Add brand assets and a preferred output format so the document matches your house style. Run it with a single line: "Use Vic to build an annual asset business plan for the 250,000 sf office asset at 400 Main Street." Vic compiles a branded Word document with a cover page, executive summary, and the standard sections. The content follows the structure institutional readers expect. Vic states the hold recommendation and value targets, then ties them to actual performance versus the prior plan and original underwriting when those inputs are available. It builds the income plan, operating plan, capital plan, and debt plan, and keeps numbers consistent across sections. The document includes a valuation view and a clear hold or sell thesis. Risks are stated plainly, along with a one year action plan that follows from the analysis. Exhibits support the narrative instead of repeating it. Two details matter. First, Vic uses your existing analyses and fills only real gaps. The plan stays grounded in your work rather than new assumptions. Second, the writing sounds like CRE writing, not a stitched summary. Assumptions are explained, metrics are clean, and the story holds together from the executive summary through the exhibits. The payoff is time and consistency. A human analyst needs roughly 480 minutes to compile the same document. This runs in about 30 minutes. More important, every asset plan uses the same structure, which makes portfolio reviews easier and cuts back on back and forth. If you manage multiple assets, standardization is the real win. You can compare plans side by side without reformatting or rewriting. When it is time for a midyear update, you edit a coherent document instead of rebuilding one.