Proposal Writing
Use this page to structure a clear client proposal for any Frontier service or product. The goal is to explain the customer’s problem, Frontier’s solution, the value to the buyer, and the next step.
Define the problem
Show that you understand the customer’s current operation, pain points, needs, and improvement opportunity.
Explain the solution
Connect Frontier’s service, product, people, and process directly to the client’s business need.
Show the value
Make the benefits clear, including operational value, financial value, implementation support, and next steps.
Start Here
What is a proposal?
A proposal is a communication document or written plan presented to the buyer. It helps the buyer review the opportunity, compare options, and make an informed business decision.
It supports the buyer’s decision
The proposal should make it easy for the buyer to understand what Frontier is offering, why it matters, and how it supports their business.
80% reusable, 20% customer-specific
Most proposals can use Frontier’s core service language, but the customer-specific section needs to reflect their actual business, pain points, and objectives.
It should create clarity
The proposal should explain the problem, the proposed solution, the business benefit, the implementation path, pricing, and the next step.
Core Structure
Use this proposal flow.
For most proposals, use this structure before adding service-specific details.
Executive Summary
Briefly explain the service, what Frontier is offering, and why the recommendation matters.
Problem
Describe the customer’s business problem, operational challenge, or improvement opportunity.
Solution
Explain how Frontier’s service, systems, people, and process solve the problem.
Benefits
Show how the service features translate into real business value for the customer.
Longer Proposal Structure
Use this for larger opportunities.
When the opportunity is larger, more complex, or involves multiple decision makers, add more detail so the proposal can stand on its own.
Title Page & Executive Summary
Use the title page to focus the reader. Use the executive summary to highlight key points, critical information, and the reason the proposal is being presented.
- Proposal title
- Client name
- Frontier contact
- Summary of the recommendation
Background Information
Document what you learned during the sales process and show the buyer that Frontier understands their business.
- Industry background
- Buyer background
- Current operations
- Improvement opportunity
- Needs and objectives
Proposed Solution
Explain what the customer needs to know about the proposed service, how it applies to them, and what benefits it creates.
- Product or service description
- Product application
- Non-financial benefits
- Financial benefits
- ROI or payback method when applicable
Implementation
Explain who will do what, how the service will be implemented, and when the client can expect each step to happen.
- Implementation responsibilities
- Timeline or schedule
- Operational handoff
- Business risk mitigation
- Team overview when needed
Seller Profile
Use this section to help the buyer understand Frontier’s credibility and why Frontier is the right partner.
- Company overview
- Relevant customers
- References
- Quality standards
- Why Frontier
Business Issues & Pricing
Clarify pricing, payment schedules, business requirements, and any important commercial details.
- Fees and costs
- Payment terms
- Commercial assumptions
- Operational requirements
Presentation Tips
Ten things to present in your proposal.
Use these points when preparing to send or present the proposal.
Buyer Expectations
Ten things a buyer expects to see.
Before sending a proposal, make sure the buyer can find these items clearly.
Improvement Opportunity
Describe the buyer’s improvement opportunity, needs, objectives, and current operational challenge.
Product Application
Explain the proposed product or service and how it applies to the customer’s operation.
Value Proposition
Make the buyer’s value clear. Explain how Frontier’s solution improves their business.
Implementation Plan
Show how Frontier plans to deliver, onboard, support, and manage the service.
References & Frontier Information
Include relevant Frontier background, customer references, quality points, and credibility markers.
Fees, Pricing & Costs
Include a complete description of fees, prices, payment schedules, and other costs where applicable.
Continue proposal development.
After reviewing proposal writing, return to the proposal template library or use the payment schedule when pricing details are required.