Investor Report: Not A Story, Not A Summary, But A Real Control Package Presented By Draw

Investors don’t want summaries.
They don’t want “don’t worry, we’re on it.”
What they need is a clear, structured, and transparent view into the project’s progress and financial health.
In real estate, the professional standard for reporting to investors is a tool called a Draw Packet—a structured request for funding based on actual progress in the field.
And if done right, it’s not just for the bank or your LPs. It’s your own internal checkpoint—your proof that the project is being managed, not managing you.
So… What Exactly Is a Draw Packet?
It’s not a spreadsheet.
It’s not a folder of scattered invoices.
A Draw Packet is a complete, organized, and verifiable document set that requests the release of funds based on actual work completed.
It answers every serious investor’s questions:
What’s been done?
How much did it cost?
Are we on budget?
What’s left to do—and how much will it cost?
What a Professional Draw Packet Includes
1. Executive Summary Table
Clear categories: construction, consultants, financing, etc.
Requested amount by category
% of work completed (as reported from the field or GC)
Total of prior draws vs. total budget
This gives investors and lenders a high-level snapshot of both financial and operational progress.
2. Invoices & Support Documents
Every line item should be backed by:
Official invoice from the GC
Supporting invoices from all subcontractors
Signed contracts or change orders
On-site approval or verification (commonly via AIA G702 / G703 forms)
If you can’t support a line item with documentation—it doesn’t belong in the draw.
3. Budget-to-Actual Comparison (Updated Pro Forma)
This table should show:
Original budget
Amount paid to date
Requested amount in this draw
Remaining budget
Variance from plan
Serious investors don’t just ask “how much did you spend?”
They ask: “Is this what you planned to spend?”
This table answers that—exactly.
4. Waivers & Compliance Documents
Every vendor paid in the draw should have:
A signed lien waiver (conditional or unconditional depending on payment stage)
A valid Certificate of Insurance (COI) with the developer listed as Additional Insured
Don’t rely on the GC alone—subcontractors can still file liens.
5. Updated Cash Flow Forecast
Show how this draw impacts future performance:
Remaining project budget
Estimated budget overruns (if any)
Timing and need for the next draw
Payment pacing vs. construction progress
Breakdown of interest-bearing loans (bridge, construction, PACE, etc.)
This is where you prove that you’re not just tracking the past—you’re managing the future.
Why This Matters
Because this is the difference between an amateur and a professional.
An investor who receives a high-quality draw packet:
Doesn’t worry
Doesn’t call every week
Sees control
Stays with you for the next deal
What Not to Do
Don’t just send a lump sum with no explanation
Don’t hide overruns and hope it “balances out later”
Don’t wait for investors to ask—anticipate and report proactively
My Pro Tip:
I always use a clean, consistent format with:
Simple language
Clear tables
All files organized in a shared Google Drive with descriptive names
When an investor opens a clean file, they don’t get stuck on questions.
They get impressed—and start thinking about what they’ll invest in next.
In Summary
Smart reporting = smart management + great communication
Clarity, structure, transparency—that’s what builds trust.
And trust is what raises capital.
Want my “Draw Packet Template” or a real estate reporting checklist?
Drop a comment—I’m happy to share
— Lihi
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