Ask your portfolio anything.
Briefing is the assistant that actually knows your operation—occupancy, delinquency, work orders, leases, vendors—and answers the way a sharp colleague would: the number first, the reason behind it, and the next step already offered. Every morning it opens on its own with the few things worth your attention. The rest of the day, it’s one keystroke away and never in the way.
What actually needs you today—ranked, not dumped.
A portfolio generates dozens of small changes overnight—a payment posted, a work order aged another day, a lease crossed the ninety-day renewal window. Almost none of it needs a person right now. The handful that does gets buried in the rest, which is why the honest version of a morning routine is forty minutes of tab-hopping just to find out what changed, usually skipped because there isn’t time.
Briefing does that work before you sit down. It doesn’t report everything that moved—it ranks the few things that actually need a decision or a call today, each one with the number behind it: a delinquency jump at a specific property, a batch of leases entering their renewal window, an insurance renewal deadline coming up. If nothing genuinely needs you, the briefing says so and stays short. A quiet morning is a real answer, not a missing feature.
A colleague who’s read the whole portfolio, not just one tab.
Type a question the way you’d ask it out loud—“which properties are driving delinquency this month,” “how many leases expire in September,” “what’s our oldest open work order”—and Briefing answers with your actual numbers, not a generic explanation of how delinquency works. It has context across every property you manage, so it can compare Brookside Park to Harbor View in the same sentence instead of making you check each one separately.
The voice is answer-then-action, always in that order. Briefing leads with the finding—the property, the number, what changed—then offers the next step: pull the account list, draft the notices, show the trend. It never hands over a wall of data and leaves you to figure out what to do with it; if there’s a sensible next move, it names it.
When it doesn’t know, it says so.
Briefing never fabricates a number, a date, or a policy to sound complete. If a feed is missing or a figure is stale, it names the gap plainly—“no live feed yet for this property” or “as of last Tuesday”—instead of presenting a guess as fact. Trust is the entire asset here; a single invented figure costs more than an honest “I don’t have that yet.”
Want the aging list for Brookside, or should I nudge the vendor on the 19-day ticket?
Briefing is where the day starts and where it gets unstuck. A regional manager opens it before the first coffee and knows exactly what needs a decision. A leasing agent mid-conversation with a resident types a question instead of putting the call on hold to find someone who knows. Neither of them left the hub to get there.
It works because it’s reading the same live picture as the rest of Opsurant—the same properties, the same numbers that feed Performance, the same policies that feed Knowledge. Ask Briefing about a policy question and it can point you into Knowledge’s cited answer instead of guessing at one itself.
Kick the tires. Then bring us your portfolio.
We’re onboarding early-access partners now—PMCs who want a real say in what gets built next. Bring your unit count and your worst operational headache.