This keeps the report anchored to the buyer instead of drifting into generic area notes.
Report structure
A buyer lifestyle report only works if it stays useful, compact, and easy to act on.
The report does not need every possible detail. It needs the pieces that help the buyer understand fit, tradeoffs, and the next best move.
Core sections
The sections that usually make the report actually useful
The report should reduce the search to believable lanes, not overwhelm the buyer with every possibility.
The comparison should show tradeoffs against the same frame instead of using promotional blurbs.
This is where the report becomes actionable instead of just descriptive.
A report should end with forward motion, not just information.
FAQ
Common buyer-report structure questions
Should the report be long and exhaustive?
Usually no. The more useful version is compact enough to revisit quickly and clear enough to guide the next decision.
Is this mainly a neighborhood guide?
No. The working idea is broader: buyer brief, area fit, shortlist logic, and tradeoff framing in one place.
Why this project exists
This is the buyer-facing report shape the product is being validated around.
The current hypothesis is that agents need a concise report that turns intake, neighborhood fit, and shortlist logic into something the buyer can revisit and trust.
The next step is not another vague neighborhood email. It is a buyer-side lifestyle report built to make the search easier to personalize and easier to move forward.