You know the drill. A listing is ready to go, and the clock starts on a two page flyer that somehow eats half your afternoon. You hunt for a template, resize images, rewrite the same headline, and make the numbers match your last deal. Most of that work is mechanical. The drag is assembly, not thinking. This task removes that step so you can stay on the deal. Marketing ~10 min to run Create Branded Two-Page Listing Flyer Vic prompt Use Vic to create a listing flyer for my deal using the provided facts, images, and branding. Purpose Delivers a complete, professional marketing piece in roughly ten minutes instead of two hours, keeping broker voice and firm branding consistent across every listing. Inputs Deal Facts Required Property Type Optional Investment Type Optional Images Optional Brand Or Style Optional Disclosable Optional Offer Process Optional Output Format Optional Outputs A branded two-page listing flyer built to the right template for the deal type, ready for client distribution or print. Time saved Turns roughly two hours of manual work into about ten minutes. How it works Give Vic the deal facts and any optional inputs you have. At a minimum, include the core property details. If you have images, brand guidance, an offer process, or a preferred output format, include those too. Vic picks the right template for the investment type, whether the asset is stabilized, value add, or development. Run it with a single line: "Use Vic to create a listing flyer for my deal using the provided facts, images, and branding." You get a complete two page flyer in your chosen format, PDF, slide deck, or Word. Page one is the front door. It has a hero image, a clear headline, a tight property snapshot, three to five investment highlights, and an annotated aerial or location map. The layout follows institutional conventions, so it reads like the rest of your book. Page two carries the underwriting story. It includes a financial summary, a tenant or income overview, trade area demographic cards, a photo grid, and the offer process with a standard disclaimer. Numbers follow CRE conventions, and sections appear where buyers expect them. Template choice matters. A stabilized deal reads differently from a value add or a ground up development. Vic uses the right structure so you are not forcing the wrong story into a generic page. That cuts revisions. Brand consistency runs in the background. If you provide guidance, the flyer matches your firm’s look and voice across listings. If you do not, Vic still produces a clean, institutional layout that will not raise eyebrows in an IC deck or a buyer’s inbox. This is production work done to a standard. The output is ready for client distribution or print. You can tweak language or swap an image, but you are editing a finished piece, not building from scratch. The time savings are obvious. The quieter gain is consistency. When every flyer follows the same structure and formatting rules, buyers spend less time decoding your materials and more time on the deal. You get fewer clarification calls and cleaner feedback. If you have ever sent a flyer that felt slightly off, mismatched fonts, uneven bullets, numbers formatted three different ways, this fixes that class of problem. It standardizes the work without flattening the deal.