Addresses, one per line.
Each gets its own script. Different anchors, different walks, different rooms. Paste a whole afternoon of showings at once.
How it works
No prompts to write, no settings to tune. You give it the showing; it gives you a room-by-room playbook calibrated to the buyer and the block.
Each gets its own script. Different anchors, different walks, different rooms. Paste a whole afternoon of showings at once.
Maya and Jordan. That's the whole field. The script speaks to them, not a persona.
A few honest notes about the buyer or the showing — relocating for work, second kid on the way, loves to cook. Skip it if you'd rather not.
What comes out
Coffee, parks, schools, trails — the real ones, named, with walking distances, woven into the script for each address.
Where to stand, what to say, what to skip. One row per room, in the order you actually walk it.
The compliments that land for this buyer, and the phrases that quietly miss. Calibrated to how they decide.
A phone-glance fullscreen for the showing, and a print-ready handout you can leave with the buyer.
Two languages, one craft
The Spanish isn't a translation pass. It's written natively in warm, US Latin Spanish — the register you'd actually use with a family at the door — so it works whether you're a Hispanic agent who closes in both, or you're showing to a Spanish-dominant buyer. Same room-by-room calibration, same anchors, no stiffness.
The reason it lands like that is the calibration engine underneath. Read how PSYT powers it →
Pay once, run them whenever. Nothing to cancel.