Tuesday, March 3, 2020
Ten tips for better sales proposals - Emphasis
Ten tips for better sales proposals   Ten tips for better sales proposals  Remember your prospect  Dont get so carried away with what youre offering that you forget  the person that youre trying to persuade. Always put the prospect  first, by starting with their situation and the problems they need to  solve.  Remember other readers  Are there other influencers and decision-makers who might read your  proposal, and have you met them? If you havent, your proposal will be  all they have to go on, so its vital that you address their needs too.  Show understanding  Impress your prospect by showing an understanding of their problems  and how to fix them, rather than trying to dazzle them with how  wonderful your company is. Your company facts and testimonials should  just confirm that you know what youre talking about.  Persuade  You still need to sell the solution(s) youre proposing, so remember  to write a persuasive sales argument  dont just let the spec speak for  itself.  Check your facts  Simple mistakes will seriously undermine even the best offering. One  senior buyer of billion-pound contracts told Emphasis that he always  circled the stupid mistakes first  such as spelling product or place  names incorrectly. Factual inaccuracies create a poor impression thats  very hard to shift.  Get the basics right  Likewise, dont let your spelling, punctuation or grammar let you down. Basic errors do nothing to create a good impression.  Dont waffle  You may be very proud of your proposal, but your prospect probably  has several others to read alongside yours. Even if they dont, theyll  certainly have a backlog of other documents to read through. In a recent  Emphasis survey, some buyers said that 90 per cent of what they read  was badly written or hard to follow. So write to express, rather than  to impress them with your splendid vocabulary.  Cut and paste with care  Cutting and pasting can be a good short cut if two proposals share  common material. But its also fraught with danger. One Emphasis client  told us of how theyd forgotten to take out a rival clients company  name when they did this. It sounds obvious, but its easily done. The  answer is to get someone else to proofread what youve written, as  youll miss many of your own mistakes. Remember: love is blind.  Take care with layout  No matter how persuasive your argument, presentation is key and a  poor layout can still let you down. Keep your layout uncluttered, crisp  and professional. Use plenty of white space, and resist the temptation  to cram too much information into every page. Less is definitely more.  Talk them through it  Finally, if you want to win, take it in. Make an appointment to talk  your prospect through your proposal if at all possible. That way youll  be able to handle any objections there and then, and maximise your  chance of a successful close.    
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