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The quality of a strong proposal always depends on how you present your proposal. Set your objectives and identify your audience, define your purpose and priorities, express your assumptions and knowledge and find someone who can check all of the mentioned above.
Begin your document with a summary of your agenda, then check the current position of your customers and identify their problems to which your product or service is the solution.
Include alternative solutions and state the advantages and disadvantages from the clients’ point of view.
After considering all of the above, start developing your suggested solution, including the benefits and drawbacks of your product or service. The actual delivery and the following actions are the final steps and will prove to your clients that they can rely on you.
Where to next?
Before finalizing your proposal, check through it again to ensure that all the information you are providing supports the objectives you originally set out and is relevant from the reader's point of view.
When you have gathered most of the material for your proposal, you can transfer it to a linear document for presentation. You can do this in Mindomo by converting topics into text in the topic notes for export to a linear document.
Good luck with your proposal!
What is your business proposal about?
Give it a name. Type it in.
What other options could solve the problem? Add an alternative.
Related information about the options that have been identified might be needed.
Add resource(s)
Resource
Summarize your alternative points.
Add a conclusion
Disadvantages must be accurately stated from your client's point of view.
Add a disadvantage
Advantages must be accurately stated from your client's point of view.
Add an advantage
Are the disadvantages of your solution less significant than the disadvantages of the alternatives?
Are the advantages of your solution more significant and relevant than the advantages of the alternatives?
Do the advantages of your solution outweigh the disadvantages?
Are the advantages of your solution fully relevant to the client?
Does your solution comprehensively and effectively address the requirements, issue or opportunity?
Check
Summarise your points about your solution.
Add a conclusion
What evidence can you provide that your proposed solution will work?
Add evidence
Ensure that the advantages you identify are relevant to the client, from their point of view.
Add an advantage
Acknowledge disadvantages early and deal with them in your proposal.
Add a disadvantage
Match up the solution with the issue or opportunity that you are addressing.
Add detail(s)
Develop the key points of your proposed solution.
Add a note
Describe the further actions for a commercial and a non-commercial proposal.
What are the next steps?
Add delivery details for a commercial proposal.
Do you need a glossary for any specific technical terms you are using?
Add a term.
Add the description for it.
Include any detailed data in appendices rather than break up the flow of the proposal.
Identify the contents of an appendix for your proposal.
Add an appendix.
Identify an opportunity that requires action to be taken, which your solution will address. Add an opportunity.
Add any supporting information or evidence of changes. Type it in.
Identify a problem that requires action to be taken, which your solution will address. Add a problem.
Identify a change or a trend in the current situation, that requires action to be taken. Add a change.
evidence
Add any supporting information or evidence of changes.
Describe the current position that your client is in.
This creates some common ground, which is a good platform for discussing your solution.
Summarize your proposal at the beginning of the document. Add a sum-up.
What do you know about the client's requirements?
Is your proposal in response to an inquiry?
Has there been provided a Request for Proposal (RFP) or other resources that you can work with?
If you have relevant materials in other files, you can attach them to this topic.
This section should not be included in the proposal.
Defining clear objectives is the key to building a good proposal.
What are your objectives?
This section should not be included in the proposal.
Who can check your objectives?
Identify who else can check the objectives and assumptions of this proposal. Add checker.
What assumptions have you made?
Are there things that you hope are true, but you cannot check? Add an assumption.
How much will the client know?
Add an assessment of the reader's knowledge.
What should you leave out?
What can you assume is not relevant, or not a priority? Add an exclusion.
What is important? Add a priority.
What action(s) are you aiming for?
What do you want the client to do, as a result of this proposal?
What is the purpose of your proposal?
What will your proposal lead to?
Who is the audience for this proposal?
Who will read it and act upon it?
Mind Maps helfen Ihnen beim Brainstorming, beim Herstellen von Beziehungen zwischen Konzepten sowie beim Organisieren und Generieren von Ideen.
Mindmap-Vorlagen bieten jedoch einen einfacheren Einstieg, da es sich um Rahmen handelt, die Informationen zu einem bestimmten Thema mit Leitanweisungen enthalten. Im Wesentlichen sorgen Mindmap-Vorlagen für die Struktur, die alle Elemente eines bestimmten Themas vereint und als Ausgangspunkt für Ihre persönliche Mindmap dient. Sie sind eine Ressource für die Bereitstellung einer praktischen Lösung zum Erstellen einer Mindmap zu einem bestimmten Thema, sei es für Unternehmen oder für den Bildungsbereich.
Mindomo bietet Ihnen intelligente Mindmap-Vorlagen, mit denen Sie mühelos arbeiten und denken können.
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Sie können aus einer Vielzahl von Mindmap-Vorlagen aus den Geschäfts- oder Bildungskonten von Mindomo wählen oder Ihre eigenen Mindmap-Vorlagen von Grund auf erstellen. Jede Mindmap kann in eine Mindmap-Vorlage umgewandelt werden, indem einem ihrer Themen weitere Leitnotizen hinzugefügt werden.