PROPOSAL and PROPOSAL WRITING-1
PROPOSAL and PROPOSAL WRITING-1
PROPOSAL and PROPOSAL WRITING-1
WRITING
Proposals and progress reports are some of the most common types of
reports you will likely find yourself writing in the workplace. These
reports are persuasive in nature:
AND
progress reports assure the reader that the project is on time and on
budget or explain rationally why things might not be going
according to the initial plan.
Provide a service.
Proposals can have various purposes and thus take many forms. They
may include sections such as the following:
o Project description
Schedule of work/timeline
Budget
Qualifications
Conclusion
3. Indicate how your proposed solution will solve the problem and
provide tangible benefits. Specifically, indicate how it will meet
the objectives and abide by the constraints outlined in the problem
definition. Give specific examples. Show the specific differences
between “how things are now” and “how they could be.” Be as
empirical as possible, but appeal to all appropriate persuasive
strategies. Emphasize the results, benefits, and feasibility of your
proposed idea.
Language Considerations
Clear and Coherent: don’t confuse your reader with unclear ideas
or an illogically organized structure.
Concise and Courteous: don’t annoy your reader with clutter,
unnecessary padding, inappropriate tone, or hard-to-read
formatting.
The following are the common problems we face while trying to write a
proposal:
Confused about the format?
There are as many proposal formats as there are a number of donors and
each donor has a different format. Although the basic information
requested by various donors is generally the same, we often encounter
snags that make the entire process confusing.
Planning problems?
Although a good idea exists, yet when we try to plan it out extensively,
we face many unexpected challenges.
Tight deadlines?
This is perhaps the most universal problem for all proposal writers. For
some reason or other, we are expected to complete working proposals
under very tight deadlines.
Solicited and unsolicited proposal?