name: sales-proposal description: > Write a compelling sales proposal. Use when the user says "write a sales proposal", "put together a proposal", "draft a proposal for this prospect", "create a business case", "write up our recommendation", "how to structure a proposal", "proposal template", "executive summary for a deal", or wants to create a written document that moves a prospect toward a decision.
Overview
Based on "The Challenger Sale" by Matthew Dixon and Brent Adamson. Dixon and Adamson's CEB research across 6,000 sales reps found that top performers don't just respond to what prospects ask for - they teach prospects something new about their business, tailor the message to what the stakeholder cares about, and take control of the commercial conversation. A Challenger proposal doesn't start with your product. It starts with the prospect's world.
Workflow
Step 1: Open with a reframe, not an introduction
The first section must teach the prospect something they don't already know about their own situation. This is the Challenger "teach" move.
Structure:
- Start with an industry or market insight the prospect hasn't considered
- Connect that insight to a specific gap or risk in how they currently operate
- Make it specific to their business, not generic to their industry
Example opening angle: "Most [industry] teams focus on [obvious metric], but the data shows that [non-obvious insight] is actually the leading indicator of [outcome they care about]. Teams that optimize for [metric] instead are seeing [specific result]."
Do not start with "Company X is pleased to present this proposal to [Prospect]." That is a brochure, not a proposal.
Step 2: Quantify their current cost of inaction
Before presenting any solution, show the prospect what staying the same costs them. Use numbers from your discovery call.
Format:
- Current state: [what they're doing today]
- Friction: [what breaks or underperforms as a result]
- Cost: [time, revenue, headcount, or risk - in specific numbers]
Example:
- Current state: Manual reporting across 4 tools, reconciled weekly
- Friction: 6 hours per analyst per week, error rate of ~12% requiring rework
- Cost: ~$180K/year in analyst time, plus downstream decisions made on stale data
If the prospect supplied these numbers in discovery, quote them back verbatim. Their data is more credible than yours.
Step 3: Present the recommendation - not the product
Lead with the outcome the prospect gets, not the features you provide. For each major problem area:
- The problem: restate in their words from discovery
- The approach: how [your product] addresses it specifically
- The result: what measurably changes, in their terms
Avoid feature lists. Every sentence in the solution section should answer "so what?" If you can't answer "so what?", cut it.
Step 4: Handle objections preemptively
Include a short section that acknowledges the top 2-3 concerns a skeptical stakeholder would have.
Format: "You might be wondering..."
- "...whether this is a priority given [competing initiative]" + your answer
- "...how long implementation actually takes" + your answer with specifics
- "...what happens if [risk scenario]" + your answer
This signals confidence and builds trust with the Economic Buyer who wasn't in your discovery call.
Step 5: Make the business case explicit
Include a simple ROI summary near the end, before pricing.
| Year 1 | Year 2 | |
|---|---|---|
| Investment | $[X] | $[X] |
| Estimated return | $[Y] | $[Y] |
| Net benefit | $[Z] | $[Z] |
| Payback period | [N months] | - |
Use conservative estimates. Label assumptions clearly. A credible conservative number beats an optimistic number no one believes.
Step 6: Close with a specific ask and next step
The last section is a call to action with a specific decision request.
Structure:
- What you're asking them to decide
- What happens next if they say yes (timeline, first steps)
- Your proposed decision date - give them one, don't ask for one
Example: "To move forward, we need a signed order form by [date] to hold your implementation slot in [month]. Once signed, [first action] begins within [timeframe]. I'll follow up on [date] to answer any final questions before then."
Anti-Patterns
1. Starting with a company overview Bad: "Founded in [year], [your company] is a leading provider of..." Good: Start with an insight about the prospect's world. They don't care about your founding date.
2. Sending a generic capabilities deck Bad: Repurposing a standard deck with the prospect's logo on slide 1. Good: Every section references something specific from your discovery conversation.
3. Feature-first solution sections Bad: "[Your product] includes automated reporting, real-time dashboards, and 200+ integrations." Good: "Your analysts spend 6 hours/week reconciling data across tools. [Your product] eliminates that with automated consolidation, returning ~300 hours/year to your team."
4. Soft close Bad: "We hope you'll consider moving forward with us. Please let us know if you have questions." Good: Give them a specific decision date, a named next step, and your direct contact.
Quality Checklist
- Proposal opens with a reframe or insight, not a company introduction
- Cost of inaction is quantified with specific numbers
- Solution section is structured around problems, not features
- Each solution claim answers "so what?" for the prospect
- Top 2-3 objections are addressed preemptively
- ROI summary is included with labeled assumptions
- Final section contains a specific decision ask with a proposed date
- Language from discovery call is used throughout - their words, not your words