Renovation Done
Punch list cleared
Title Waiting on them
Commitment 4 days out
Legal Scheduled
Review booked Thu
Permits Blocked
Needs access window
Occupancy Scheduled
Walkthrough confirmed
A property turn or a closing only moves when the contractor, the title company, the attorney, the inspector, and the tenant are all in sync, and right now the only thing keeping them in sync is you, relaying between a dozen people who don't answer to each other. Here's that coordination running on its own, so deals keep moving without living in your inbox.
The mental map you carry of who owes what, now visible and tracked for you.
The polite, persistent nudge you'd have to remember to send, sent on time, in your name.
One shared source of truth instead of you re-explaining the deal to five people.
Your time goes to finding and closing deals, not chasing five parties around one.
Maple St: reno done, title nudged, attorney Thu. 1 blocker.
Inspector needs an access window, tenant flexible. Open ›
The kind of coordination backbone a growing real estate operation usually solves by hiring a transaction coordinator, tuned to how your deals actually close.
For a real estate operation, this is the whole game: deals close on time because nobody's waiting on you to relay the next step.
If we're wrong, the conversation ends here. If we're close, this is rarely the only thing you're holding together by hand.
We built this from public information. How close did we get?
Tell us where we got it right, or where we missed. Under a minute.