You get the Phase I back and it is a wall of text. The details you need are in there, but they are scattered across sections, tables, and appendices. You skim, bookmark, and still wonder if you missed a trigger. This is where deals slow down or move forward on partial reads. The question is simple. Do we have a Phase II issue, and what needs to happen now. Due Diligence ~5 min to run Generate a Phase I Environmental Tear Sheet Vic prompt Use Vic to review the Phase I ESA for the 45-acre industrial site at 123 Main Street and produce the tear sheet. Purpose Reduces the time to extract key environmental findings from 60 minutes to about 5 minutes and surfaces Phase II triggers and obligations before a deal advances. Inputs Phase I Report Required Output Format Optional Additional Context Optional Outputs A one-page Phase I Environmental Tear Sheet in Word or in-chat format with the Phase II verdict, findings table, compliance obligations, property overview, and action items. Time saved Turns roughly 60 minutes of manual work into about 5 minutes. How it works Give Vic the Phase I report. That is the only required input. You can ask for a Word document or keep it in chat, and you can add context if you want, but the task runs fine with just the report. Run it with a single line: "Use Vic to review the Phase I ESA for the 45-acre industrial site at 123 Main Street and produce the tear sheet." Vic reads the report and returns a one-page summary built for decisions. The output opens with a two-line property overview so everyone is clear on what is under review. Then it states the Phase II verdict in plain terms. If the report supports a Phase II recommendation, you see it right away. If it does not, that is clear too. Next is a findings table. It puts RECs, CRECs, HRECs, and de minimis conditions in one place. No flipping between sections to piece together what was found and how it is categorized. This is the part people often rebuild by hand. Here it is already organized. Then Vic lists ongoing compliance obligations pulled from the report. These often get lost when a file moves from diligence to asset management. Keeping them on the same page as the verdict ties them to the decision. The page ends with up to three next-step actions. Short, specific, and limited. That constraint forces prioritization and cuts the low-value tasks that creep into many reports. The payoff is speed and clarity. Extraction drops from about an hour to a few minutes. More important, Phase II triggers and obligations are visible before the deal moves. You can send a clean page to your IC, partner, or lender and get a quick read without forwarding a 100-page PDF. This does not replace the report. It is the page you wish sat at the front. When timing matters, it keeps the conversation on what counts.