Although I see this mistake made frequently, getting more out of the people working on proposals does not mean getting more proposals written with the same number of people. It's a bit counter-intuitive, but the reality is that winning pays for the effort. And then some. And then a whole lot more. You want people to win proposals and not just work hard at submitting a bunch of losers. And if they are winning, hiring people to do more proposals is easy.
If you leave people on their own expecting them to just figure out how to win the proposal, what you'll get is people working very hard to achieve a low win rate. To get more out of the people working on proposals, you should make sure they have the information they need, clear priorities and expectations, and know not only what to write about but also how to present it. A small investment in developing your proposal process and supporting your proposal teams will not only improve your win rate, it will provide a ROI that is orders of magnitude greater than the investment.
People work more effectively when they are supported, guided, and don't have to figure everything out on their own. If you wrap them in what they need, they'll spend less time organizing and getting started, and they'll work more effectively too! Here is what you can do to help people working on proposals be more effective:
- Figuring out what it will take to win. This should be the job of everyone who has customer contact and customer insight. Even if they are just guessing, their guessing will be better informed than anyone else's guess. You can improve your ability start your proposal with an information advantage, you start it with a competitive advantage. If you want to get more out of the people working on your proposals, feed them an information advantage to work with.
- Set clear priorities and expectations. Other work gets in the way of winning proposals. Should it? Can resources be re-allocated? People often can't make these decisions for themselves. Make priorities and options clear so that time is not lost untangling what the priorities should be. The same holds true for expectations. Everyone has expectations. When they conflict, the friction negatively impacts performance. If you want to get more out of people, get rid of conflicts by better communicating and managing everyone's expectations.
- Script a constant flow of communications. When people have questions, it's often because they need to know something that wasn't communicated to them. Before, during, and after every task there should be communications preparing them, guiding them, and helping them complete before moving on to the next set of before, during, and after communications. While creating templates for proposal content will do more harm than good, creating templates to communicate about common activities and issues can reduce the time it takes, make people more productive, and enable it to actually happen.
- Provide guidance regarding what to write and how to present it. People spend more time talking and thinking about the proposal than they do writing it. The more you written proposal quality criteria. The writers should know what target they are aiming for and the reviews should merely be confirming how close they got and helping them get it to the bullseye. If you skip this step then the writers will guess, the reviewers will subjectively assess, and revision cycles will get continuously added until you get to the deadline and submit what you have instead of what you were really capable of.
- Surface issues quickly during the proposal for resolution. When working against a proposal deadline, you don't want people to be stuck or slowed down by working around an issue. You want issues surfaced quickly. The more quickly they are surfaced, the more time you have before the deadline to resolve them and get back on track.
These add up to something important
These eight items add up to an environment where people have what they need to work with, know how to deal with priority and expectation conflicts, aren't slowed down by issues, know what's coming and what they need to do, and pass all of their reviews so they can spend their time improving instead of starting over. When you wrap people with support like that, they become more productive at winning. This delivers a far improving your win rate by a couple of percentage points pays for the entire proposal, what does improving your win rate by 10% get you? If that is what you get out of your people, you can hire all you need to submit as many proposals as you want and still have enough to improve your company's overall margins. Then go for a 20% improvement.
Let's discuss it!
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.