The Best Way to Kill Your Proposals

The Best Way to Kill Your Proposals

It’s a common scenario, and it kills proposals.

A seller sends a proposal out to?a prospect. They’re excited because the prospect seems eager to move forward and hasn’t brought up any objections or indications that they’re even on the fence. A few days go by, the seller hears nothing. A follow-up is sent…radio silence.

Weeks (and several follow-ups) later, there’s still nothing but crickets.

The seller can do nothing but scratch their head and wonder what went wrong.

Sound familiar?

Remember: nothing kills a proposal faster than packing it with “value” and features that the client doesn’t need.

It’s counter-intuitive, the more value you provide, the better, right? Not so fast.

When you stuff a proposal with added benefits and features that were not discussed with the client, you risk leaving them wondering if they’re paying too much for something they don’t need.

Think about it: if you promise A, B, C and quote them a certain price, and then include X, Y, Z out of left field in the proposal, at the very least a prospect is likely to come back and ask for a?price?that reflect only A, B, and C. However, in many cases, the prospect will simply shop elsewhere, find another solution, and forget all about the proposal you prepared.

Feel like a prospect could genuinely benefit from some of your added services? That’s fine! However, bring them up in the form of questions?prior?to the proposal going out.

“We also offer service X, which gives you the added benefit of Y. Would this be something you’d like for us to add on?”

The worst thing you can do is?assume?they’ll want something and?throw it in?to the mix as a good gesture.

If you do, you’ll risk killing your proposal before it even reaches your prospect.

Be clear, specific, and consistent with your prospect’s needs and what you offer them via a proposal!


Robin Ayoub

AI Training Data | NLP | Prompt Engineering | Multilingual Speech-to-Text Transcription | Chatbot | Conversational AI | Machine translation | Human in the loop AI integration

3 年

Colleen, thanks for sharing!

Sopheak CHAN ??

CEO | Cambodian Helicopter & Private Jet Charter Executive Director | Cambodia Tourism Association

3 年

??

This is so true! When you offer too many things your client or prospect doesn't need, it immediately turns them off to any further discussion. The same is true for follow-ups. When you follow-up with your leads, you need to make sure you're solving their problems and not someone else's. Great ideas Colleen Francis

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