Posts Tagged ‘proposal writing’

No. 18 – Year end closing plan

Thursday, October 8th, 2009

HOW SAFE IS YOUR YEAR END QUOTA?

Many sales and business development people are looking at how they are going to finish the year and bring in their outstanding deals to hit quota  so here is a closing checklist to help you. 1) Are you really dealing with ALL the decision makers?  2) Is your proposition a “nice to have” or a “necessity”  what urgency to buy have you created? 3) Have you submitted a quote or proposal? 4) Does your proposal show hard cash savings or revenue gains  with a real ROI agreed with the prospect? 5) What risks do you have to minimize to avoid a no go decision?  5)What else could “your” budget be spent on instead of your solution or service –  how will you counter this?

Don’t fool yourself, if there is the slightest doubt – go back get this information. Make a list of what you need to do to close the deal, with dates, and have a formal closing plan.

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Effective business development demands presenting proposals not sending quotes!

Wednesday, February 25th, 2009

Are you really presenting proposals or in reality are you sending your prospects and customers a glorified quote that is titled a proposal?

A quote tells the buyer the price.  A proposal sells the benefits, explains you know the prospect’s business and details why they should go with your solution, product or service.  A proposal explains the cost as an investment, it details why your prospect can’t afford not to do business with you.

So why don’t sales people write proposals?  They think they have to be long, fully detailed works of art and they often do not get enough information on the sales call about the prospect’s needs,  They probably don’t have the facts and figures for a valid ROI argument either.  So a quote gets delivered, but on the front cover it says ”A proposal for……….”

A proposal does not have to be a long diatribe, it does not have to be a glossy, four color, spiral bound masterpiece.  In some circumstances even one page will do!

A proposal is about substance not volume and should include:


1.  An introduction
2.  The prospect’s needs
3.  Your solution
4.  The investment and ROI
5.  Why your solution
6.  Appendices (terms, specs, warranty etc.)

Frequently a proposal will go on one or two pages and can be a simple Word template (ask for an example).  Don’t forget if it is a long proposal then you do need an executive summary and a really usable contents page.

With prospects and sellers alike being so busy these days, we are even using PowerPoint slides with short sharp bullet points to present proposals.  We then export the slides into a .pdf and give it to the customer – they love it!

Last point – don’t forget, if a proposal is worth writing, its worth taking in person.

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No. 1 – IF A PROPOSAL IS WORTH WRITING THEN IT’S WORTH PRESENTING!

Monday, January 19th, 2009

Does your sales process mean giving your prospect a written proposal? Then present it in person, don’t send it. You should use a proposal to close the order not open the sale, this means you need to be there. If a visit is not practical, arrange a set time to telephone and with the prospect on the line email your proposal, present it and then ask for the order. More info on proposal writing.
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