An invitation to the M2G Ventures team

Welcome to the AI era, M2G.

You create places where people want to be. Let's bring that same intention to the technology behind the work. Tell me what you'd want AI to handle — and I'll start building before we meet in Dallas.

How this works
Why this page

AI isn't coming for your work. It's coming for the busywork.

I'm Scott Molluso — I build AI software for real-estate firms. M2G has done remarkable things, and the next edge is using AI for the parts of the day nobody enjoys: the re-keying, the chasing, the reports, the "where do we stand?" questions. The best ideas for that won't come from me. They'll come from the people doing the work.

A few ways AI could help

Imagine these — tuned to how M2G actually works.

01

Portfolio at a glance

Every asset's numbers vs. plan, rolled into one live view — instead of a dozen spreadsheets and a Friday scramble.

02

Investor updates, drafted

Reports and answers pulled straight from your own numbers and documents, ready for a human to polish.

03

Deal & project flow

Sourcing, underwriting, and status that move with the deal — no re-entering the same thing five times.

04

Document & lease review

Long PDFs read in seconds, key terms surfaced, so you can decide instead of skim.

05

Research on demand

Market, comps, and background pulled together fast — a junior analyst that never sleeps.

06

Your own copilots

Whatever your team does over and over, there's likely an AI assist for it. Tell me which one bugs you most.

How this works

A two-minute chat now. Working ideas in Dallas.

01

You talk, I listen

Have a quick chat with the AI guide. Share what you're curious about and the problems you'd love solved.

02

I start building

This week I'll take what your team says and begin prototyping real solutions for M2G — before we even meet.

03

We meet in Dallas

Instead of a blank-slate intro, we walk in with ideas already in motion, shaped by you.

Two minutes, that's it

What would you want AI to do for you at M2G?

There are no wrong answers. The smallest daily annoyance is often the best place to start.