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Developing Proposals

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Title: Developing Proposals Author: Marie C. Paretti Last modified by: rgrisso Created Date: 9/7/2004 11:21:49 AM Document presentation format: On-screen Show – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Developing Proposals


1
Developing Proposals
  • Responding to an RFPto establish a contract

2
Proposals as Persuasion
  • We write proposals to persuade audiences to act
    in a particular way
  • To fund a project (e.g. asking a granting agency
    such as NSF to fund your research)
  • To approve a project (e.g. asking a manager
    within your department to approve a process
    modification)
  • To accept a product (e.g. trying to win a
    contract for a specific job)

3
Elements of Persuasion
  • When responding to a request for proposals (RFP),
    you need to convince them of several things
  • That you understand the need defined by the
    client
  • That your proposed project meets that need
  • That your project is viable
  • That the benefits outweigh the costs
  • That you are capable of completing the project
  • Bottom Line Do the benefits (tangible and
    intangible) outweigh the costs?

4
Expectations Proposal Structures
  • Summary (Problem Statement, Executive Summary)
  • Brief statement of the need, the project (scope
    of work), the benefits, and the costs
  • Provide the big picture or bottom line to
    someone who may not read the rest of the document

5
Expectations Proposal Structures
  • Statement of Need an explanation of why the
    work needs to be done
  • Contract proposals Review of RFP
    client-defined needs
  • Prior work (research, archives, available data)

6
Expectations Proposal Structures
  • Project Description Scope of Work
  • Design constraints Practical matters that govern
    the possible design options
  • Deliverables Concrete, measurable outcomes
  • Justification How deliverables meet need
  • Benefits Why your plan is best

7
Expectations Proposal Structures
  • Safety, Regulatory, and Environmental
    Considerations
  • External factors that influence the design
  • Laws the design must conform to
  • Ethical considerations that must be considered

8
Expectations Proposal Structures
  • Project Design
  • Implementation Project Plan (phases, big
    picture)
  • Schedule Detailed work plan (Gantt Chart
  • Project Evaluation
  • Mechanisms to determine success

9
Structure of Proposals (contd)
  • Literature Review
  • Provides necessary background
  • Demonstrates your understanding of the problem
  • Reviews information necessary for developing
    effective solutions

10
Knowing Your Audience
  • To persuade an audience to act, you need to first
    analyze that audience
  • Who makes the final decision?
  • What is the audiences knowledge base?
  • Why does the audience care? What is their stake
    in the outcome?
  • What are the criteria (explicit and implicit) for
    decision-making?
  • What constrains the decision?
  • Is the decision merit-based or competitive?
  • What biases, values, predispositions, etc. does
    your audience have?

11
Knowing Your Tools
  • Winning proposals rely on three types of appeals
  • Appeals to Logic support your claims with the
    facts of the case
  • Appeals to Emotion support your claims by
    connecting your work to your audiences value or
    beliefs
  • Appeals to Credibility support your claims by
    helping the audience believe you

12
Tips for Developing Content
  • Review all relevant documents from your audience
  • Research information to support both the need and
    the project description
  • Brainstorm all possible benefits and costs, and
    highlight those most important to your audience

13
Effective Research/Design Proposals.
  • Support the need for the project with a review of
    the relevant literature
  • Provide a concrete set of deliverables in
    response to the need
  • Demonstrate a well-thought-out approach to
    meeting the need
  • Give the reader confidence in the investigators
    knowledge and ability
  • Clearly account for all spending requests
  • Build common ground with the audience

14
Building Common Ground
  • To reach your audience, you need to think and
    write on their terms
  • Use your audiences language
  • Explain all unfamiliar terms
  • Read between the lines and address the audiences
    values as well as their stated needs or
    expectations

15
Making Your Proposal Readable
  • Use meaningful headings and subheadings to
    organize your text
  • Meaningless Literature Review
  • Meaningful Tillage Research in Undeveloped
    Countries since 1990
  • Use lists to help highlight key information
  • Deliverables
  • Critical needs
  • Benefits
  • Use graphics to illustrate key concepts
  • Use tables and charts to illustrate plans
  • Schedule
  • Budget

16
Making Your Prose Concise
  • Go for the verb
  • Avoid passive voice
  • The dog was walked by me.
  • I walked the dog.
  • Avoid nominalization
  • The committee makes a recommendation
  • The committee recommends
  • Avoid expletive construction
  • There are five factors that influence
  • Five factors influence
  • Cut overblown phrases
  • http//www.wisc.edu/writing/Handbook/CCS_wordyphra
    ses.html
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