Business
Client Proposal Section Generator
Used by developers, writers, and creators worldwide.
A client proposal section generator saves the blank-page problem that kills proposal momentum. Paste in your service type and client name, choose a section — executive summary, scope of work, approach, why choose us, or next steps — and get a structured, ready-to-edit draft in seconds. Freelancers, agency teams, and consultants use it to compress hours of writing into minutes. The output follows proven proposal conventions, so the structure is sound before you touch it. Treat it as a first draft: add real figures, mirror language from your discovery call, and match your brand voice. Done consistently, it becomes a repeatable system for winning more work.
Loading usage…
Free forever — no account required
How to use
- Choose your options above
- Click Generate
- Copy your result
Detailed instructions
- Enter the type of service or project you are proposing in the Service field (e.g., 'Brand Identity Design' or 'SEO Audit').
- Type the client's company name in the Client field so the generated text references them by name.
- Select the specific proposal section you need from the dropdown — Executive Summary, Scope of Work, Approach, Pricing, or Next Steps.
- Click Generate and read the output in the Proposal Section panel, checking that the tone and framing suit the engagement.
- Copy the text into your proposal document and edit in real figures, specific deliverables, and any details from your client conversations.
Use Cases
- •Freelance developers writing a scope-of-work section for a Webflow redesign project
- •Agency teams responding to an RFP with a 24-hour turnaround on an executive summary
- •Management consultants drafting a pricing-framing section to justify a £1,500 day rate
- •SaaS sales reps generating an enterprise proposal's approach section before a review call
- •Solo brand strategists building a next-steps section that moves a warm lead to a signed contract
Tips
- →Generate each section separately rather than trying to cover everything in one pass — the output is sharper when it focuses on one job at a time.
- →For pricing sections, edit the generated framing to reference a specific ROI or business outcome the client mentioned in discovery — it makes the cost feel proportionate.
- →Run the executive summary section last, after you have finalised scope and approach, so the summary accurately reflects what the full proposal promises.
- →If you serve a recurring client type (e.g., e-commerce brands, law firms), save a lightly edited version of each generated section as a starting template for that vertical.
- →Paste the generated scope-of-work text into a shared doc with your client before the proposal is finished — early alignment on deliverables prevents scope disputes later.
- →For competitive RFPs, use the Approach section output to highlight process steps that your competitors rarely explain, turning methodology into a visible differentiator.
FAQ
what sections should every client proposal include
At minimum: an executive summary, your proposed approach, a defined scope of work, pricing or investment framing, and clear next steps. Enterprise proposals often add case studies and team bios. Keep every section focused on the client's outcome, not your credentials.
how do I frame pricing in a proposal without sounding expensive
Anchor the number to the outcome it produces, not the hours it costs. Grouping line items under phases or value areas helps, as does offering two or three tiered options — it shifts the client's decision from 'should I spend this?' to 'which level fits best?'
can I reuse a proposal template for different clients
Yes, but rewrite the executive summary and scope for every engagement — generic proposals are obvious and lose deals. Use a shared structure for efficiency, then layer in specifics from your discovery conversation to make each proposal feel built for that client alone.