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\nAbout the\xa0author
\nAlan Weiss is one of those rare people who can say he is a consultant, speaker, and author and mean it.
\nHis consulting firm, Summit Consulting Group, Inc., has attracted clients such as Merck, Hewlett-Packard, GE, Mercedes-Benz, State Street Corporation, Times Mirror Group, The Federal Reserve, The New York Times Corporation, Toyota, and over 500 other leading organizations. He has served on the boards of directors of the Trinity Repertory Company, a Tony-Award-winning New England regional theater, Festival Ballet, and chaired the Newport International Film Festival.
\nHis speaking typically includes 20 keynotes a year at major conferences, and he has been a visiting faculty member at Case Western Reserve University, Boston College, Tufts, St. John\u2019s, the University of Illinois, the Institute of Management Studies, and the University of Georgia Graduate School of Business. He has held an appointment as adjunct professor in the Graduate School of Business at the University of Rhode Island where he taught courses on advanced management and consulting skills to MBA and PhD candidates. He once held the record for selling out the highest priced workshop (on entrepreneurialism) in the then-21-year history of New York City\u2019s Learning Annex. His Ph.D. is in psychology. He has served on the Board of Governors of Harvard University\u2019s Center for Mental Health and the Media.
\nSource: https://alanweiss.com/about-alan-weiss/
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\nAbout the\xa0book
\nThe newest thoughts and examples on the best practices and language for successful professional services proposals. This is the contemporary version of the seminal book How to Write A Proposal That\u2019s Accepted Every Time, originally written in 1998 and updated in 2002. Adopt the best global practices Alan has generated for conceptual agreement, options, escalating fees, avoiding the legal department, eliminating cancellations, and much more. He includes information about RFPs (requests for proposals) and retainers. Increase your income by six figures a year without doing anything different\u200a\u2014\u200aexcept how you formulate your proposals.
\nSource: https://alanweiss.com/shop/books/paperback/million-dollar-consulting-proposals/
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\nBig idea #1\u200a\u2014\u200aProposals with\xa0purpose
\nYour proposal doesn\u2019t do the selling for you. This is the fundamental idea of the book; the proposal isn\u2019t doing anything that you haven\u2019t already done. The sale should really already have been made from the meetings you\u2019ve had, and the relationship you have built with the economic buyer. It\u2019s a summary of what has come before and what has been agreed.
\nThere\u2019s a quote in the book that says;
\nA proposal is a summation, not an explanation. It is a summary of the conceptual agreement you\u2019ve reached with your economic buyer and not a negotiating document or an attempt to make a sale.\n
It\u2019s easy to fall into the trap of sending a proposal without having actually ever sold anything, and making the mistake of seeing a proposal as the start of the sales process, rather than the end.
\nAlan says that the things that proposal should do include;
\nConversely, what the proposal documents shouldn\u2019t do is;
\nHe says that most people send proposals too early and too often, even sometimes using the number of proposals sent out as a measure of success.
\nBig idea #2\u200a\u2014\u200aKnow your\xa0buyer
\nThis isn\u2019t just from an avatar perspective and coming up with your stick figure pretend \u2018buyer\u2019 and writing things that they like / feel etc. This is about really building a relationship with the economic buyer; the person who can sign off the purchase order, who can pay the invoice, who can approve the finances involved in working with you.
\nAt several points in the book Alan makes some sick burns at HR people (he often refers to them as Hardly Relevant in other talks / podcasts) and emphasizes many times that you should never deal with them. A proposal in the wrong hands, he says, is worse than no proposal at all. So we need to be working directly with our economic buyer.
\nBuilding a trusted relationship with your economic buyer might take several meetings or interactions, and is not done through a proposal document. He says you know the relationship building is going well when the other person shares undisclosed/non-public information with you and ask your opinion.
\nBy working with the buyer you are able to better articulate value, because you know exactly what is important to them, what their objectives are, what outcomes would be valuable to them, and how to talk about those things in their words.
\nHe says when gatekeepers are involved (or low-level people, as he often refers to them) that keep you from your buyer, it\u2019s time to \u2018blow a hole in the wall\u2019 and find your own way to the economic buyer. He acknowledges this is a bit of a risky approach, and may only work 10% of the time, but that\u2019s better than the 0% which you\u2019re going to get if the gatekeeper keeps you from the economic buyer.
\nBig idea #3\u200a\u2014\u200aThe nine key components
\nAlan very helpfully in the book provides several templates to use an example proposal, including wording and structures. Some of the wording you might not like, but it gives you a chance to make these your own. There are nine key components to one of his million dollar proposals:
\nHe says including these sections means easier and clearer conversations every single time, and therefore a better acceptance rate. But only if the work has been done upfront and you\u2019re using proposals to summarize, not sell.
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