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Proposal Style Sheets

I’m in the midst of another client proposal this month, so there might be a couple proposal-related posts. Nothing wrong with that: it’s a great way for tech writers to earn a steady income and grow their business network. Today’s post will be about proposal style sheets, which help a multi-person team use the correct fonts and headers, but also achieve something approaching a similar literary style. This is harder than it looks.

The Easy Stuff

Creating a style sheet for a proposal is pretty straightforward: in it, you create a Word document (or equivalent) that includes and demonstrates all the “basics” that the team will be using on their proposal, including:

Mind you, people being people, you can still end up with some individuals refusing to follow directions or “expressing creativity” even when the instructions from the customer clearly state a specific format (at the risk of having the proposal thrown out), but at least everyone has the same starting point.

The Other Stuff

Another way proposals can get messy is with differences in nomenclature and grammar. For example:

All of these issues might not apply to you, but you might have others that require a firm rule to keep your proposal from seeing four or five different spellings for the same word.

The bottom line on an in-house (or is it inhouse?) style sheet is a useful tool for ensuring some level of commonality among your writers. However, understand that it will become a work in progress as lessons are learned and problems are identified.

 

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