What is the real problem with Excel and email in a real estate deal?
The problem is not that Excel, PDF and email are bad tools. They are excellent tools — for the jobs they were designed for. Excel is a calculator and a modelling canvas. PDF is a fixed rendering of a document at one moment. Email is a messaging channel. None of them was ever designed to be a system of record for a multi-party, multi-month, legally consequential transaction.
A real estate investment is exactly that kind of transaction. A single deal pulls in a developer or asset owner, several investors or a family office, a financing partner, lawyers and a notary — each contributing data, documents, decisions and signatures over weeks or months. When the connective tissue between those parties is a folder of spreadsheets, a stack of PDFs and a sprawling email thread, the transaction has no center. There is no canonical version of the numbers, no controlled set of documents, and no record of the sequence in which things were decided.
That absence has a name in software: there is no single source of truth. Everything downstream — diligence, financing, onboarding, signing, reporting — inherits the ambiguity. And ambiguity in a transaction that moves institutional capital is not a cosmetic flaw. It is the surface on which operational errors and compliance gaps form.
How does spreadsheet version chaos actually create risk?
Version chaos is the most visible failure mode, and the most underestimated. A deal model starts as one spreadsheet. Someone emails it for review. A colleague edits a copy. The developer sends back an updated rent roll. A financing partner adjusts the capital-stack assumptions in their own version. Within days there are five files named some variant of 'Deal_Model_final_v3_LF_clean.xlsx', and no one can say with certainty which one is authoritative.
The mechanics of the risk are concrete. A figure corrected in one copy stays wrong in the three copies still circulating. A formula silently breaks when a row is inserted, and the error propagates into the equity return line that an investment committee will read. A linked cell points at a tab someone deleted. Because spreadsheets fork rather than merge, every divergence is permanent until a human notices it — and humans notice late, usually after the wrong number has already been quoted to a counterparty.
For institutional capital the consequence is not just a re-work cost. It is the possibility that a decision — to commit, to price, to proceed — was made on a number that was already stale when it was read. A system of record eliminates this class of error by design: there is one live object, everyone references it, and history is preserved rather than overwritten.
Why is an email thread not an audit trail?
Email feels like a record because it is timestamped and hard to fully delete. But an audit trail is not a pile of timestamped messages — it is a structured, complete and tamper-evident account of who did what, in what order, against which version of which document. An inbox satisfies none of those conditions.
Consider what an email thread cannot tell you with confidence months later. It cannot prove that the investor who approved a term saw the final version rather than an earlier draft. It cannot show that a required step happened before, not after, the commitment. It cannot guarantee the thread is complete, because side conversations, forwards and replies-all fragment the history across dozens of mailboxes. And it cannot prevent a participant from quietly editing a forwarded quote. Reconstructing 'what actually happened' becomes a forensic exercise across inboxes that may no longer be accessible.
This is precisely where institutional real estate investment differs from a casual transaction. The parties may need to demonstrate the integrity of the process itself — not just the outcome. OwnMore approaches this descriptively as an execution platform: each consequential action is recorded in an append-only, SHA-256 audit chain, so the sequence and integrity of the process are verifiable rather than reconstructed after the fact. That is a property an email inbox cannot offer.
What goes wrong with PDF data rooms and manual KYC?
A PDF is a snapshot. The moment a term sheet, valuation or rent roll is exported to PDF and attached to an email, it is frozen at that instant and severed from its source. If the underlying figure changes, the PDF does not — it keeps circulating as a confident-looking document that is quietly out of date. Multiply that across a deal's worth of attachments and you have an information set where no one can be sure which document is current.
A shared folder or an email attachment is also not a data room. A genuine data room enforces who may see which document, logs every access, watermarks where appropriate, and presents one current set rather than a sediment of overlapping drafts. Without those controls, confidentiality leaks and information symmetry — the assurance that every party is working from the same facts — quietly erodes.
Manual KYC and investor onboarding compound the exposure. Collecting identification and qualified-investor classification over email means sensitive personal and financial data scattered across inboxes, with no structured check that each required step was completed and evidenced. Under a framework such as Swiss FinSA, investor classification and the associated suitability and information duties are not optional paperwork — they are obligations that must be demonstrable. A manual, email-based process makes the very thing you must be able to prove the hardest thing to find.
Why is fragmentation specifically a compliance risk under Swiss FinSA?
It helps to separate two layers of risk. The operational layer is about errors: stale numbers, missed conditions, lost documents. The compliance layer is about provability: even when everything was, in fact, done correctly, can you demonstrate it?
Swiss FinSA (the Financial Services Act) organises much of its protection around investor classification — distinguishing retail, professional and institutional clients — and attaches duties to that classification, including information, suitability and documentation obligations. The common thread is evidence. A regulated process is not only expected to be correct; it is expected to be reconstructable and defensible after the fact.
Excel, PDF and email are structurally incapable of producing that evidence. They record fragments, not a continuous, ordered, tamper-evident account. When the proof of correct conduct is scattered across spreadsheets and inboxes, the institution carries the burden of stitching it together — exactly when it is least convenient to do so. This is the deeper reason the chaos matters for institutional capital: the cost is not measured only in wasted hours, but in unprovable process. Reducing that exposure is a core reason a structured execution layer exists.
This is educational context on how the framework is structured, not legal or investment advice; classification and obligations should always be confirmed with qualified Swiss counsel.
How does a structured execution layer replace the chaos?
The alternative to the Excel/PDF/email stack is not a better spreadsheet or a tidier inbox. It is a different category of system: one execution layer that the transaction lives inside, rather than a set of files that pass between people.
Described structurally, that layer carries a real estate investment through its full path: project intake, where a deal is captured once as structured data; a structured investment presentation, generated from that data rather than hand-built in slides; a digital dealroom with real access control and logging; financing and investor onboarding, including FinSA-aware investor classification, handled as governed steps rather than email attachments; contracts and signatures; and reporting. Because every stage reads from the same source, the single source of truth is preserved end to end, and because consequential actions are written to an immutable, SHA-256 audit chain, the process is verifiable by construction.
This is the role OwnMore is built to play. OwnMore (legal entity: BloomDigital GmbH, Switzerland) is a real estate investment execution platform — emphatically a Swiss real estate investment platform, not a supplement, wellness or MLM brand. It is described here purely as infrastructure: a platform that structures the workflow, not a party that gives investment advice or solicits capital. You can read how the execution model is composed on the platform page, follow the staged path on the workflow page, and see the regulatory and audit posture in the trust center. The point is simple: institutional real estate capital deserves an execution rail built to be a system of record — and that is precisely what Excel, PDF and email were never meant to be.