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Negotiating A Project

The document provides instructions for writing two emails negotiating a project between a large company and freelancer/small company. The first email is from the company to a freelancer discussing a job opportunity. The second email is a response from the freelancer asking for more details about the job.

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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
198 views1 page

Negotiating A Project

The document provides instructions for writing two emails negotiating a project between a large company and freelancer/small company. The first email is from the company to a freelancer discussing a job opportunity. The second email is a response from the freelancer asking for more details about the job.

Uploaded by

Allan B
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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email English

11 Negotiating a project
You are going to write two emails: the first to a freelancer/small company asking them to work
with you on a particular job; the second a reply to a partner about a different job, in which you
take the role of a freelancer/small company yourself.
EMAIL 1
You work for a large company that needs to employ a freelancer or small company for a specific
job. Write to the freelancer/small company about the job.
Prepare the situation using the questions below. The information can be real or imaginary.
What is your companys business? What products/services do you offer?
What job or project needs a freelancer or small company?
Ideas: an IT project; auditing your books; some training for your staff; a legal service; a
design service.
Who are you going to write to?
How did you get their contact information?
Ideas: the Internet; recommendation from a colleague.
What exactly do you want this freelancer/small company to do?
What do you need to know in terms of their charges, availability etc.?
Do you have any specific questions to ask them about this job/project?
Ideas: some specialist knowledge that they have.
Now write the email.
When you finish, work with a partner. Check each others grammar, spelling, punctuation and
style. Is everything clear, well-structured and easy to understand?
EMAIL 2
Exchange emails with a different partner. Now you are the freelancer/small company that your
partner needs to do the job. Write a reply to the email you receive
Some ideas are given below, but adapt and change them as you wish.
Thank them for their email.
Say that you attach a file with some information about yourself.
Ideas: your publicity material; rates; list of clients etc.
Ask questions about practical details that you need to know.
Ideas: dates? times? size of the job/project?
Respond to any other points in the email you received.
Now write the email.
When you finish, work with a partner. Check each others grammar, spelling, punctuation and
style. Is everything clear, well-structured and easy to understand?
FOLLOW-UP
Continue the exchange of emails for a few more turns, negotiating details as you go.


This material has been written to accompany email English, by Paul Emmerson. ISBN 1405012943
This page has been downloaded from www.businessenglishonline.net.
It is photocopiable, but all copies must be complete pages.
Copyright Macmillan Publishers Limited 2004.

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