You get the lease, open a blank template, and the clock starts. Parties, term, rent steps, expense language, reporting, default, assignment, options. Halfway through, you are scrolling back to confirm dates and cross check addendums. It is repetitive work that still needs accuracy. Miss a clause and the review slows when someone asks a basic question you thought you covered. Due Diligence ~10 min to run Create a Simple Commercial Lease Abstract Vic prompt Use Vic to abstract this office lease agreement into the standard eight sections. Purpose A human analyst needs roughly 90 minutes to complete the same work. The task reduces that to about 10 minutes so teams can move through lease reviews faster. Inputs Commercial Lease Required Output Format Required Addendums Optional Outputs A structured abstract in .docx or .xlsx format, or as chat text, that lists the eight sections with the extracted lease details. Time saved Turns roughly 90 minutes of manual work into about ten minutes. How it works Give Vic the lease and specify the output. Upload the base document and any addendums, then choose a Word document, an Excel attribute sheet, or a chat response. The run command is simple: "Use Vic to abstract this office lease agreement into the standard eight sections." Vic reads the lease and pulls terms into a consistent structure that matches how most teams review deals. The abstract is organized into eight sections: parties and term, rent schedule, expenses, reporting, default, assignment and use, ROFR and ROFO, and termination rights. This is about repeatability. Every lease reads the same on the page. The output is built for quick reference. In Word, you get a clean abstract that drops into a deal file or IC memo. In Excel, you get an attribute sheet you can sort and filter across tenants. In chat, you get a quick answer when you need to check a clause. Each format uses the same sections, so the team is not translating between layouts. This replaces a manual pass that usually takes about 90 minutes for a straightforward lease. The task runs in about ten minutes. Time savings help, but consistency matters more. When every abstract follows the same structure, it is easier to compare leases across a rent roll and spot outliers in rent steps, expense recoveries, or termination rights. It also cuts rework. During diligence, questions come back in cycles. Who has ROFO. What are the reporting requirements. What triggers default. A structured abstract lets you answer without reopening the lease each time. Include addendums up front and Vic folds them into the same eight sections, so amendments do not sit outside the summary. There is no magic beyond careful extraction. Vic does not invent terms or fill gaps. It pulls what is in the document and puts it where you expect it. That makes it reliable for a first pass and easy to audit. If something looks off, you can trace it to the lease and fix it fast. For acquisitions and asset management, this shifts the work from reading leases one by one to reviewing a standard set of facts. Brokers get a clean summary to share internally. Due diligence teams move faster without cutting corners. Judgment still matters, but the time goes to decisions, not transcription.