The simple test
Here's the test: if your committee packet is built by copy-pasting from a spreadsheet, a PowerPoint, and an email thread, your reporting is on the wrong side of the productivity line. It will eat hours every week, it will be out of date the moment it ships, and it will look inconsistent enough that partners notice.
What "self-building" actually means
A self-building report does not mean "the AI writes it for you." It means the report pulls live from structured deal data — locations, projects, evaluations, financials — and renders on demand. The structure is templated; the content is live.
- A Summary report shows the same shape every time, but the numbers are current.
- A Story report assembles the narrative around live financials — when actuals change, the story updates.
- A Financial report pulls income statements with the same line items across deals, so apples-to-apples comparison is the default.
Where most teams stall
The reason most teams haven't moved to self-building reports isn't that the tooling doesn't exist — it's that the underlying data isn't structured enough to generate from. If your income statements have different line items per deal, your financial report can't be templated. The path to better reports starts with disciplined underwriting templates.
Reclaiming the hours
The teams that get this right reclaim significant hours every week — usually 5 to 10 hours per analyst, just from not assembling packets by hand. That time goes back into actual deal work. The investment pays back fast.
