International Freight Forwarding Proposal Template
Use this page to learn how International Freight Forwarding works, what client problems it solves, how to qualify the opportunity, and how to position the proposal without turning it into a generic global shipping pitch.
What this service is
International Freight Forwarding helps clients move goods globally by air, ocean, ground, or multimodal solutions while coordinating the details between origin and destination.
When to lead with it
Lead with IFF when a client is shipping internationally and needs help with carriers, routing, visibility, foreign-market delivery, customs, or cost control.
How to use the proposal
Use the proposal once the shipment lane, mode, timeline, destination, and client pain point are clear.
Understanding The Service
What is International Freight Forwarding?
International Freight Forwarding is the coordination of global shipments from origin to destination. For a new sales rep, think of it this way: the client has goods that need to move across borders, and Frontier helps arrange the route, carriers, communication, customs coordination, and delivery plan.
Frontier coordinates the global move
The client needs goods shipped internationally. Frontier helps arrange the transportation, manage the handoffs, and reduce the complexity of moving freight across countries.
Global shipping has more moving parts
International freight can involve multiple carriers, different countries, customs requirements, destination delivery, documentation, and unexpected costs.
You are selling coordination and confidence
Do not position this as only “we can move freight.” Position it as a way to simplify global shipping, improve visibility, and reduce the risk of missed handoffs.
How To Sell It
What problem does IFF solve?
The client may not ask for “freight forwarding.” They may say they need to ship overseas, source from another country, move containers, control costs, track shipments, or figure out who can manage the full international process.
They need one team managing the move
Use this when the client has too many parties involved and needs someone to coordinate origin, carrier movement, customs, and delivery.
They do not know where freight stands
Use this when the client needs tracking, reporting, status updates, and clearer communication during the shipment journey.
They need the right air, ocean, or ground plan
Use this when the client is unsure whether speed, cost, timing, or shipment size should drive the transportation mode.
Foreign delivery feels complicated
Use this when the client needs help arranging movement within the destination country after the international leg is complete.
They are worried about complications
Use this when the client is concerned about foreign import fees, government restrictions, tariffs, customs, delays, or handoff issues.
They need the move to make financial sense
Use this when the client needs routing, mode selection, bundled services, or planning that balances cost with reliability.
Qualify The Opportunity
How to know if this is a good prospect.
International Freight Forwarding is strongest when the client has real global movement, enough detail to understand the lane, and a problem that goes beyond a simple one-off quote.
Use this proposal when the prospect has a real international freight need.
Slow down if the prospect only wants a quick transactional rate.
Discovery Questions
Ask before sending the proposal.
These questions help identify whether the proposal should focus on speed, cost, visibility, carrier coordination, customs, or global supply chain support.
Where is the freight moving from and to?
This confirms whether the opportunity is truly international and helps identify the trade lane and destination complexity.
Are you looking at air, ocean, ground, or unsure?
This tells you whether the client is prioritizing speed, cost, shipment size, or flexibility.
What product are you moving?
This helps identify special handling, documentation needs, customs considerations, and possible restrictions.
What is frustrating about your current process?
This opens the door to cost, delays, poor communication, limited visibility, or too many vendors involved.
When does the shipment need to arrive?
This helps determine if the solution should lean toward air, ocean, expedited routing, or a planned freight schedule.
What would make this easier for your team?
This helps move the conversation toward a quote, proposal, lane review, account setup, or internal meeting.
Proposal Playbook
How to use the proposal without dumping copy.
The original proposal language stays on the left. The selling angles live in the right card as dropdowns, so the section stays balanced and easier to use.
Use this when the client needs reliable global freight coordination.
This is the main opener. It positions Frontier as a partner that can help the client move global shipments with visibility, carrier coordination, and supply chain confidence.
Match the proposal angle to the client’s shipping problem.
Open the selling angle that matches what the client said during discovery. Do not lead with every freight feature at once.
Lead with: End-to-end freight management.
Use when: The client needs support managing origin, routing, carrier selection, customs coordination, and destination delivery.
What you are selling: One coordinated process instead of disconnected handoffs.
Lead with: Real-time shipment tracking and visibility.
Use when: The client is frustrated by unclear status updates or not knowing where freight stands.
What you are selling: Better communication and fewer blind spots during the shipment journey.
Lead with: Frontier’s global carrier and logistics network.
Use when: The client needs reliable movement through trusted carriers and logistics partners across international lanes.
What you are selling: Access to coordinated global support without the client managing every partner alone.
Lead with: Dedicated customer support.
Use when: The client needs clearer communication, help with shipment issues, or support during complex international moves.
What you are selling: A team that helps guide the shipment instead of leaving the client to chase answers.
Lead with: Custom solutions based on shipment requirements.
Use when: The client needs air, ocean, ground, or multimodal transport built around timing, cost, and shipment requirements.
What you are selling: The right plan for the shipment, not a one-size-fits-all freight answer.
Lead with: How IFF connects to broader supply chain support.
Use when: The IFF opportunity came from a customs, warehousing, brokerage, distribution, or supply chain conversation.
What you are selling: A connected Frontier solution that can support more than one piece of the client’s operation.
Common Objections
What a rep may hear on a call.
These are coaching notes, not scripts. Use them to keep the conversation grounded.
“We already have a forwarder.”
Ask what is working well and what they would improve. If they mention visibility, communication, delays, or cost control, there may still be a fit.
“We just need a rate.”
Do not jump straight to pricing. Ask enough questions to understand lane, commodity, volume, timeline, delivery requirements, and service expectations.
“Our supplier handles freight.”
Ask whether the client has enough visibility, control, and confidence in cost and delivery timing. Supplier-controlled freight may still create gaps.
“International shipping is too complicated.”
Position Frontier as the team that helps simplify the moving parts: routing, carriers, customs coordination, communication, and delivery planning.
Just need the template?
Download the IFF proposal template when you already understand the service and only need the working document.
Support Resources
What to send and when to send it.
Use these resources based on where the client is in the sales conversation.
IFF Proposal Template
Use this when the client is ready for a proposal and you already understand the shipment lane, mode, timeline, and pain point.
Updated & Important Forms
Send when the opportunity is moving toward account setup or the client needs documents to begin onboarding.
Updated Rate Sheets
Use after the shipment lane, commodity, service mode, volume, and delivery requirements are understood.
Brochures & Mailers
Use client-facing material when the prospect needs a simple overview before a deeper quote or proposal conversation.
Past Proposals
Use past proposals to review structure and positioning, but always update scope, pricing, lanes, service details, and current requirements before sending.
Setting Up an IFF Account
Use once the opportunity moves from proposal discussion into account setup and onboarding requirements.
Final Checklist
Before sending the IFF proposal.
Use this checkpoint so the proposal does not become a generic freight document dump.
Next step for the sales rep.
Confirm the shipment lane, identify the real shipping problem, choose the right proposal angle, and send only the resources that help move the opportunity forward.