Find the real owner behind the LLC
Rung 8 of 10 · Fact-check list
1 · Learn the move · Fact-check list
Half the buildings on your target list are vested in an LLC named after the address, and the person you need is nowhere on the deed. Chasing the chain by hand across assessor, recorder, and secretary-of-state tabs invites the classic error: promoting the registered agent to decision-maker, when the agent is usually a law firm or a $49-a-year service. A fact-check list makes the model cite which pasted record produced every link in the chain, mark what the records don't show as UNKNOWN, and treat mismatched addresses as findings instead of smoothing them over. You walk away with a short pull list, not a guessed-at name.
Who actually owns 1420 Industrial Parkway? Here's what I found. [PASTE]
2 · Your turn — you write the prompt
You're canvassing flex-industrial in the Airport submarket and 1420 Industrial Parkway keeps surfacing — right size, tired signage, no listing history. The assessor shows an LLC you've never heard of. Before you write a letter or knock on the door, you need to know who actually answers for this asset — and what the public record does and doesn't prove.
Remember: the AI sees only your prompt — not this page. If the situation isn't in your prompt, it doesn't exist.
Optional — these shape the output when you run your prompt below, not your score.