Courier Proposal Templates
Use this page when building proposals for Frontier courier services, including Same Day, Home Delivery, and Overnight/general courier opportunities. The goal is to help a rep choose the right courier angle, understand when each proposal block applies, and get to the correct working document quickly.
For time-sensitive Saskatchewan delivery
Use when the customer needs same-day movement between Regina, Saskatoon, and Moose Jaw.
For direct-to-consumer delivery
Use when the customer needs a courier partner to connect stores, warehouses, and customers’ homes.
For Toronto-to-Western Canada movement
Use when speed, tracking, and reliable overnight movement are the main selling points.
Start Here
Pick the proposal angle before writing.
Courier proposals should not read like a generic service list. Pick the client’s situation first, then use the copy that speaks directly to that need.
Confirm the region
Identify whether the opportunity is in Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario, or connected to Toronto-to-Western Canada movement.
Confirm the service fit
Decide whether the client needs Same Day, Home Delivery, Overnight/general courier support, or a blended proposal.
Customize placeholders
Replace company name, region, business type, warehouse, store, and service details before sharing the proposal.
Add supporting material
Use rate sheets, brochures, forms, and past proposal examples to support the proposal instead of overloading the core copy.
Qualify The Opportunity
How to know if this is a good courier prospect.
Courier proposals work best when the rep understands the route, urgency, delivery expectation, ordering process, and whether the client needs visibility, speed, or direct-to-consumer support.
Use this proposal when the client has a real delivery problem.
Slow down if the request is only a vague shipping ask.
Proposal Playbook
Courier proposal sections by service type.
The original proposal language stays on the left. The service positioning lives in the right card as dropdowns, so the rep can match the proposal section to the client’s actual delivery problem.
Use the copy block that matches the client’s service need.
Courier proposals should be selective. Keep the section that fits the opportunity and remove service copy that does not apply.
Match the proposal angle to the client’s delivery problem.
Open the selling angle that matches what the client said during discovery. Do not lead with every courier service at once.
Lead with: Same-day movement between Regina, Saskatoon, and Moose Jaw.
Use when: The client needs time-sensitive delivery inside Frontier’s Saskatchewan courier network.
What you are selling: Faster delivery, stronger customer experience, and fewer delays between key courier markets.
Lead with: Frontier’s Regina warehouse and same-day courier coverage into Regina, Saskatoon, and Moose Jaw.
Use when: The client ships into Saskatchewan from outside the province and needs faster local delivery after product arrives.
Original language: Shipments can be delivered to Frontier’s Regina warehouse and, pending arrival time, packages for final delivery in Regina, Saskatoon, or Moose Jaw can be sent out that same day.
Lead with: Store, warehouse, or business-to-home delivery support.
Use when: The client needs a courier partner to pick up product from a chosen location and deliver directly to the customer’s home.
Original language: Our home delivery service throughout [region] offers a fast and affordable option for [your business] to connect directly with your customers.
Lead with: Fast, reliable, and efficient freight movement from Toronto to Western Canada.
Use when: The client needs overnight/general courier support with tracking, dependable routing, and customer support.
What you are selling: Speed, visibility, route reliability, and confidence across a longer Canadian shipping lane.
Same Day Positioning
Why same-day shipping matters.
Use this language when the proposal needs to explain the business value of faster delivery, not just the courier route.
Speed influences buying decisions
Customers often compare delivery timelines when choosing between similar products. Faster delivery can help a company stay competitive.
11:00 AM order cut-off
Frontier’s 11:00 AM cut-off gives customers more time to place orders while still supporting same-day delivery in eligible lanes.
Saskatchewan courier reach
Frontier’s courier network across Regina, Saskatoon, and Moose Jaw supports stronger same-day coverage for Saskatchewan delivery needs.
Reduced cross-docking
Same-day movement can reduce the number of handling points, lowering the chance of lost or damaged packages during delivery.
Online dispatch and tracking
Customers can place orders online, track shipments, and view electronic proof of delivery without relying only on phone updates.
Better customer confidence
Use this when the client cares about keeping their own customers informed and reducing delivery-related frustration.
Overnight Positioning
Toronto-to-Western Canada proposal points.
Use these proof points when speed, visibility, support, and reliable freight movement are the strongest reasons to choose Frontier.
Fast overnight delivery
Position Frontier around priority movement, route planning, and dependable overnight transportation.
Real-time shipment tracking
Use this when the client needs shipment updates, status visibility, and better control over their supply chain.
Dedicated customer support
Use this when the client values access to a responsive team that can assist with questions, updates, and shipment needs.
Discovery Questions
Ask before sending the courier proposal.
These questions help identify whether the proposal should focus on Same Day, Home Delivery, Overnight/general courier, or a blended courier solution.
Where are the shipments moving?
This confirms whether the opportunity fits Saskatchewan Same Day, home delivery, Toronto-to-Western Canada, or another route.
How quickly does delivery need to happen?
This identifies whether Same Day, overnight, scheduled courier, or another service level should be discussed.
Who is receiving the shipment?
This helps separate business-to-business courier needs from direct-to-consumer home delivery opportunities.
How are orders submitted today?
This tells you whether online ordering, dispatch calls, tracking, proof of delivery, or system visibility should be positioned.
What is not working with the current courier process?
This opens the door to delays, poor visibility, missed delivery expectations, damage, or too many handoffs.
What would make delivery easier for your team?
This moves the conversation toward a quote, proposal, account setup, or operations review.
Support Resources
What to send and when to send it.
Use these resources based on where the client is in the courier sales conversation.
Same Day Proposal Template
Use this when the opportunity is focused on Same Day delivery, especially Saskatchewan movement between Regina, Saskatoon, and Moose Jaw.
Toronto-to-Western Canada Template
Use this when the opportunity is built around overnight/general courier or freight movement from Toronto into Western Canada.
Canuck Courier Last Mile Proposal
Use as a past proposal reference when the opportunity involves last-mile delivery or courier proposal structure.
Supportive Material
Open the support material area for past proposals and examples that can help shape the final client-ready version.
Updated & Important Forms
Send when the opportunity is moving toward account setup or the client needs documentation to begin onboarding.
Updated Rate Sheets
Use after the courier region, service type, delivery timing, and client requirements are understood.
Final Checklist
Before sending the courier proposal.
Use this checkpoint so the proposal does not become a generic courier document dump.
Next step for the sales rep.
Confirm the delivery region, choose the correct courier service path, download the right template, and remove any copy that does not match the client’s actual delivery problem.