|
How To Write
A Proposal To Get Freelance Work
Teacher: Angela
Booth
If you're a freelancer looking
for work, drop that CV! Your primary tool for generating work
is a proposal, not a CV.
Some of your proposals will be
written in response to Requests for Proposals (RFPs), where
businesses put out a call for proposals to provide solutions
to problems.
The proposals you generate on
your own, after you've identified a need the client has, are
called Unsolicited Proposals. By creating lots of proposals,
you get lots of work.
When I'm soliciting copywriting
work, I write mini-proposals, of around a page, or 300 words.
I send out these mini-proposals either as an introduction to
my services, or as a follow-up to an initial call I've made
to the business.
Whenever you're going through
a slow period, turn out a few proposals. I promise you, within
a week or two, you'll have more work than you can handle. Businesses
are used to receiving proposals, so no one will think it odd
when you submit one.
So what does a mini-proposal
contain? A single page, with:
* a description of a problem
(or need) you conceive the business has;
* an outline of the solution;
* why you're the person to solve
this problem --- what skills you have.
Simple, right?
When you start sending out mini-proposals
regularly, you WILL get work. Lots of work. Everyone has problems;
everyone is looking for solutions.
You market yourself to businesses
as someone who can solve their problems.
== Spotting a need
Start by training yourself to
spot problems (call them challenges when you're communicating
with businesses) and needs that businesses have. You're going
to become Mr or Ms Fixit.
Let's take a simple example of
spotting a need. Let's say you're a writer, browsing the Web,
and you come across a business Web site which has lots and
lots of typos.
How do you approach the business?
Go to Better Whois, at http://www.betterwhois.com/
and get the business owner's contact details.
Now you're going to fax, mail
or email a message.
Let's say you've decided to email
the manager of the business. Your message's Subject line could
be: "Proposal ---Web site proofing".
Because of all the spam on the
Internet, you're going to make it clear that although this
is unsolicited, it's a normal business communication, not a
message that you're firing out at random to a thousand businesses
on the Web.
Construct the message as you
would a postal letter, with the name of the owner or manager,
the business name, and the date on the first few lines.
Next comes the salutation: "Dear
Mr Smith".
Introduce yourself immediately.
"My name is John Brown. I'm an
independent writer. I visited your Web site at _________."
At this point, make some kind
and generous comments about the site, to that show that you've
actually visited it. Say anything you like here, as long as
it's a compliment.
Then describe the problem ---
mention the typos, in other words. DON'T be explicit. Don't
mention where the typos are. (You're looking for work, remember.)
Outline the solution: you can
proof the site content.
Tell Mr Brown why you're the
person to handle the proofing.
Tell Mr Brown how to contact
you.
Close the message in the usual
way.
Add all your contact details:
phone, fax, and address.
By addressing your email message
clearly, and putting in all your contact details, you've established
that you're not a spam artist. You're a business person sending
a proposal.
Great! You've written your first
proposal. Now go and write another one. And another one after
that.
Proposals are great fun to write,
and no matter what kind of work you're after, they will get
you more work than you can handle.
About the teacher:
Discover how to
transform your talent into a flourishing business. Subscribe
to Creative Small Biz, the free weekly ezine.
Sub at: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Creative_Small_Biz/
Or Visit: http://www.digital-e.biz
|