The memo always comes together at the worst time. Numbers are moving, diligence is still coming in, and you are pulling pieces from a model, a T12, a comp sheet, and a half written narrative. By the time it is formatted, sourced, and branded, a good part of the day is gone. This task cuts that scramble. It uses the inputs you already have and produces a complete IC memo with the ask and recommendation on page one, with every figure tied to a source. Underwriting ~30 min to run Draft an Investment Committee Memo Vic prompt Use Vic to draft an investment committee memo for this property using the attached deal documents, model, and comps. Purpose Delivers a complete, sourced memo ready for committee review in roughly 30 minutes instead of 300. Inputs Deal Documents Required Property Address Required Property Type Required Recommendation Context Optional Business Plan Optional Pricing Guidance Optional Model Skill Or File Optional Prior Analyses Optional Brand Skill Or Assets Optional Ic Outline Skill Optional Market Reports Optional Comp Documents Optional Third Party Reports Optional Outputs A branded Word investment committee memo with cover, recommendation, executive summary, transaction summary, property overview, market, comparables, underwriting and business plan, returns and capital structure, sensitivities, risks, diligence summary, open items, and appendices, plus attached exhibits. Time saved Turns roughly five hours of manual work into about 30 minutes. How it works You give Vic the deal documents and basic context: property address, property type, and anything you have on recommendation, business plan, pricing guidance, and prior analyses. Attach your model or point to it, include comps and market reports if you have them, and add any firm specific outline or brand assets. If you skip structure, Vic uses a 13 section default that mirrors institutional memos. Run it with a simple command: Use Vic to draft an investment committee memo for this property using the attached deal documents, model, and comps. Vic builds the memo as a branded Word document. The front page carries the recommendation and the ask so a partner can decide how to read the rest. The body follows a clear sequence: executive summary, transaction summary, property overview, market, comparables, underwriting and business plan, returns and capital structure, sensitivities, risks, diligence summary, open items, and appendices. If you provided a firm outline, it uses that. Every figure has a source tag. Rent, expenses, and growth tie back to the T12 or the model. Comp conclusions point to the comp set you attached. Assumptions sit next to the numbers they drive in plain language. This section is where memos usually get picked apart. The output includes exhibits alongside the memo: the model, a sensitivity workbook, the comp set, and maps. You are not rebuilding charts or screenshots. The package is ready for circulation to committee without a formatting pass. A note on tone and structure. Vic writes like a human analyst at a CRE firm, not a template. It uses your brand assets and Word style guide if you provide them, so the document looks like it came from your shop. If you have private conventions for sections or naming, those carry through. You still own judgment. If your recommendation context is thin, the memo will read that way. If you want a sharper stance, give Vic a clear buy, pass, or re trade view and any constraints on price or structure. The task works best with a point of view on page one. In practice, this shifts the work from assembly to review. You spend time checking sources, tightening the narrative, and pressure testing sensitivities instead of building the document. The result is a memo that reads cleanly, answers the obvious questions, and is ready for committee in about 30 minutes.