Writing Proposals That Make a Strong First Impression

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Summary

Writing proposals that make a strong first impression is about crafting tailored, engaging, and goal-focused documents that resonate with decision-makers and address their specific challenges. These proposals should be memorable, emotionally compelling, and structured to facilitate decision-making.

  • Understand your audience: Build proposals with the entire buying committee in mind, ensuring they are easy to understand, mobile-friendly, and structured as a clear, compelling story rather than a technical specification list.
  • Focus on the buyer’s goals: Frame the proposal around the client’s identified problems, restating their challenges and offering tailored solutions that align with their needs and definitions of success.
  • Create emotional engagement: Use storytelling and visuals to connect with your audience, as first impressions and emotional resonance often influence decision-making more than technical details.
Summarized by AI based on LinkedIn member posts
  • View profile for Stan Rymkiewicz

    Brand partnership Head of Growth @ Default

    16,270 followers

    I looked at over 100 proposals worth over $500K as a B2B buyer. I only remember a few. Here are 4 ways you can set yourself apart (and why most proposals never get looked at): 1. Built for the buying committee - not just the champion Most proposals assume one person makes the decision. That’s rarely true. The best ones were written with execs in mind. Mobile-friendly, easy to skim, and structured like a story, not a spec sheet. The kind of doc I could forward without rewriting a single thing. (like Qwilr!) 2. Helped me sell internally The proposals that stood out made me look good. They included visual slides I could screenshot into a board deck. Framed the problem. Showed the cost of inaction. Made the ROI feel obvious. They gave me language to use with my CFO, not just the vendor’s pitch. 3. AEs tracked engagement and followed up with a purpose Great sellers didn’t “check in.” They followed up based on what I actually did. They knew when I viewed the proposal, which sections got read, and what was skipped. Every email felt relevant—because it was. They weren’t guessing what mattered. They had data. 4. AEs pre-empted objections I hadn’t even voiced yet Before legal asked for terms, I had a friendly breakdown of the key clauses. Before procurement jumped in, I had a clear explanation of how pricing scaled. It felt like the AE knew my internal process better than I did - and helped me get ahead of it. TAKEAWAY: Most proposals are written to present. The best proposals are built to sell. Qwilr turns your proposal into a selling tool—one that’s interactive, trackable, mobile-ready, and designed for the whole buying committee. It helps your champion make the case. And it helps you win deals - even when you’re not in the room. If you want to stand out, build proposals that do more than inform. Build proposals that close.

  • View profile for Apryl Beverly, MBA in Marketing

    Cultural AI Marketing Consultant | Fueling Growth & Innovation with Human-Centered AI | Award-Winning Strategist | WBE & WOSB-Certified | Trusted Partner to Universities, Chambers, Urban Leagues & Small Business Leaders

    6,643 followers

    Let's talk about the psychology of what actually makes proposals win. Research shows decision makers rely heavily on the 'affect heuristic' - they make choices based on emotional reactions, then justify with logic. Yet most proposals skip straight to specifications, ignoring how the human brain actually processes information: →First impressions form in milliseconds →Initial gut reactions influence final decisions →Emotional engagement determines attention span This is why template proposals fail. When all technical responses look identical, decision makers rely on emotional differentiation. What does this mean for your 2025 proposals? Your executive summary needs to: →Tell a compelling story →Create an emotional connection →Paint a clear vision Your technical responses should: →Demonstrate understanding beyond specs →Show personality while maintaining professionalism →Make complex information accessible Because while checking all the boxes gets you considered, emotional engagement gets you remembered. And when responding to RFPs riddled with requirements? Being memorable is what wins contracts. Do you always customize response executive summaries or go with templates?

  • View profile for Ashley Beck Cuellar

    It’s pronounced KwayR | Seamless Roofing | Head of Expansion | Commercial roofing, but Smarter. Faster. Less disruptive. | Silicone Coatings > Full Roof Replacements | Yoga Pirate | ABC✌️💙

    13,530 followers

    Here’s how I write sales proposals that close deals. [it's not some complicated playbook - you can do it] You've done your discovery. You know how you can be helpful. What do you do next? Don't give them a “here’s what we offer” or “here’s everything we can throw at it.” But instead show them: “here’s how we solve your exact problem.” It is not the time to pitch. Now is when you reflect on the discovery. So the buyer sees their own words in the solution. Here’s how: 1. I restate the problem in their words. - “You said your team is great at relationships, but inconsistent with follow-up.” - “You said you're getting leads, but they aren’t converting.” I want them nodding before they even hit page 2. 2. I clarify what success looks like to THEM, not me. - “You said if you could fix this, you’d see X% more close rate and get your weekends back.” That goes right into the intro. This isn’t about what I offer, it’s about what THEY want. 3. I keep the offer tight and tailored. - 2–3 specific things I’d do. That’s it. - Each one maps back to the exact problem they named. 4. I include pricing options + a next step. - “Based on what we discussed, here are 3 levels of support I can offer." - “Let’s hop on a quick call, just to align and confirm the scope, then we can get started!” No long-winded, bullet-pointed slides. (this kills me) No menu of options and asking them to pick. Just confidence you can help & next steps. TL;DR Here's my Hot Tip: --> Start by making it more about the buyer and what THEY need than about your business and "what you offer."

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