Skip to content
Sales & Marketing

Ditch Your Big Proposal

Leave your big proposal behind. Read up on how to create a 1-page proposal and why you are more likely to receive a bid.

Ditch_Your_Big_Proposal.jpg

How often do weighty “free audits,” detailed technical studies, or long-winded proposals drive customers to embrace efficiency? How many times in your career have you either offered one of these things to a prospect, or received one yourself with horror realizing that now you have to read the thing or at least pretend you did?

Tom Sant is a nationally respected proposal consultant and author who spends his life coaching people on how to make more effective proposals. I was speaking at a national conference where he was also speaking and overheard him telling his audience, “You could probably put the words ‘Up yours!’ anywhere in a thick proposal like this and never be called out because people simply don’t read them!” 

I have to agree with him, particularly in situations where you and several other bidders are responding to a Request for Proposal. The committee (or worse yet, individual) responsible for reviewing submittals might have twenty or more of these boat anchors arrive in the mail with only a week or two to review and comment upon each and every one of them. Do you think those proposals ever get read? Skimmed, perhaps. Read from cover to cover? Not on your life.  

What would happen if one respondent took a different tack, submitting a one-page proposal (in keeping with what we teach in the Efficiency Sales Professional™ and Learning to Sell Efficiency Effectively™ courses) explaining his or her approach to the project, and then provided a separate technical appendix containing the necessary details? Whose bid response would be reviewed first? Whose bid response would be the most memorable? Whose bid would be the first to be discussed when the committee met to compare notes on all submittals?


Love one of our blogs? Feel free to use an excerpt on your own site, newsletter, blog, etc. Just be sure to send us a copy or link, and include the following at the end of the excerpt: “By Mark Jewell, Wall Street Journal best-selling author of Selling Energy: Inspiring Ideas That Get More Projects Approved! This content is excerpted from the Sales Ninja blog, Mark Jewell's daily blog on ideas and inspiration for advancing efficiency. Sign up at SellingEnergy.com.”



Want our daily content delivered to your inbox? Subscribe to the Sales Ninja blog

Subscribe

Mark Jewell

Mark Jewell

Mark Jewell is the President and co-founder of Selling Energy. He is a subject matter expert, coach, speaker and best-selling author focused on overcoming barriers to implementing projects. Mark teaches other professionals and organizations how to turbocharge their sales success.

SUBSCRIBE-CONCEPT-876110004_727x484

Subscribe to our Blog

Get daily “drip-irrigation” reinforcement. Each day you’ll get bits of wisdom, news, highlights of upcoming courses, and quotes to keep you inspired and motivated.

Latest Articles

The sun sets on the Selling Energy blog

The sun sets on the Selling Energy blog

As of April 1st, our Selling Energy daily blog will be discontinued. And no, this is not an April Fool's joke!

Weekly Recap, March 31, 2024

Weekly Recap, March 31, 2024

Miss one of our sales blogs this week? Our weekly recap will get you caught up and prepared for success.

How You Sign Business Emails Matters

How You Sign Business Emails Matters

Emails are an integral part of our work, and with each one we hope to get a response. What if just two words can make all the difference?