Proposal Writing Articles
PROPOSAL WRITING: 21st Century Proposal Writing
Strategies
Proposal writing strategies that meet 21st century standards depend on
one overriding principle.
You must be passionate about creating proposals that sell for you when
you are not in front of your clients.
So what does that have to do with 21st-century strategies?
Let me explain by showing how the types of websites you display to the
world relate to your proposals.
Websites fall into three categories.
CATALOG WEBSITES
As the name indicates, this type of website literally displays your
catalog of products, prices, specifications, special offers, and
delivery terms. Visiting office supply sellers such as Staples or Office
Depot or computer companies such as Dell and Hewlett-Packard illustrate
this type of website.
These websites offer a multiple of choices for shoppers to choose from.
And, they offer potential customers alternatives to brick-and-mortar
selling points.
BROCHUREWARE WEBSITES
Again, as the name implies, what you find at these sites generally
reflects product or service information and contact information you
could see on the company's brochures. They focus on aesthetic feel and
marketing information.
Their purpose is to influence you to contact them to learn how they can
help you. The purpose of these sites is to generate leads.
IMPULSE WEBSITES
These sites are sometimes called "One Pagers."
These sites have one objective in mind – to influence you to order now.
They do not offer multiple products, multiple options, or multiple
pricing.
These sites contain benefits, benefits, and more benefits that you
realize by buying product before leaving the site.
Besides the benefits, they contain endorsements, letters of
recommendation, and glowing statements of results from delighted
customers.
And they offer unbelievable incentives. If you buy now, you will receive
bonus items, whose dollar value equals two or three times what you
actually pay for the product or service you buy.
The purpose of impulse websites is to convince you to buy now .
These sites rely only on the written word to influence you. Yes, some of
the sites include video or audio endorsements, but the basic premise
remains that the customer is not in front of them and so the website
must sell them now.
Now the question becomes – which of these three website strategies most
closely aligns to your proposal writing strategies?
If you answered number one or two, you might be wasting a lot of time,
money, and effort with your proposal writing efforts.
Your proposal writing should employ impulse websites' overriding
passion for selling when prospective customers must rely on the written
word.
Contact Al Now
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Al Borowski,
MEd, CSP, PP
Certified Speaking Professional
Professor of Positivity
al@proposalwritingsuccess.com
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Proposal Writing Success
PO Box 24505
Pittsburgh, PA 15234
412-561-7628
877-902-3314 Toll Free
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