Proposal writing is neither “technical writing” nor “marketing writing,” so it comes with its own goals and objectives—and it demands its own style. Unlike technical writing, proposal writing focuses on persuasion, not just the transmission of information. Proposal writing is organized to score well, rather than to decompose a problem.
Similarly, proposal writing is unlike marketing writing in that proposal writing focuses on facts and substantiation of claims. The intent of proposal writing is to persuade through objective analysis rather than emotion.
How do we navigate the tricky needs of proposal writing? For starters, always remember that proposals are scored, not read. This means that proposal writing, first and foremost, provides the information asked for in the solicitation’s proposal instructions. The easier you can make it on the customer’s proposal evaluator the better. That may mean that the proposal volume does not read like a novel from page one to the end. Make it easy for the evaluator to find what they have asked for, then write the response to score well, according to the solicitation’s evaluation factors.
Some time ago I worked with a senior Business Development lead who was fond of saying that our proposals had to be, “complete, compliant, and compelling.” He said it so often and so fast that it became an empty slogan, with no impact on how we wrote our proposals. Besides being an empty slogan, it’s also redundant—if a proposal is “compliant,” it is by definition “complete.”
One valuable tool to check if your proposal is organized and written to have the best chance to win is the Seven ‘Cs’ of proposal writing:
You can get by with mediocre proposal writing but checking your writing against the Seven ‘Cs’ will boost your chances of winning.
Written by Jeff Leitner, senior consultant at Red Team Consulting. Check out Jeff’s advice on how to implement a bid decision process that works and why PWin is the most important bid criteria.