There's still time to join our upcoming Advanced Technical Writing course hosted by Jordann El Dorry and Susanne Barsoum! Class starts July 18th. Sign up now: https://lnkd.in/dZFxtvqj
Spiky point of view for the day: 90% of the proposal design meetings I've seen aren't useful. Here are the pain points I see: 🚫 Too many people in the room, so discussion is not deep 🚫 Too many tangental discussions not relevant to the RFP's scope of work 🚫 No one read the RFP beforehand 🚫 Participants don't know what to contribute so the session turns into a 'spaghetti on the wall' discussion We all know that time is our most precious resource in proposal development, so how can we make design sessions produce something that is actually useful to the proposal team? I developed some tips for Keylime Academy that I share in our upcoming Advanced Technical Writing course. I'll give you a sneak peek now: 🏆 Limit participation: Yes, this is controversial. But the best design meetings I've been in have been in small groups...usually only the people on the proposal team who NEED to be there (e.g. the technical writer) and a handful of subject matter experts. 🏆 Assign pre-work: Make sure you give participants 'homework' in advance of the design session...things like an overview of your capture efforts, your overall strategy (if you have one already), etc. 🏆Send the RFP to participants in advance: Make sure your subject matter experts actually read the RFP's scope of work BEFORE the meeting to minimize tangental or irrelevant discussions 🏆Set clear objectives: Tell participants what you want to get out of the design session. It could be a theory of change to lay the logical foundation of your bid. It could be a set of detailed activities for one or multiple components in the RFP. Whatever your goal is, make sure it's stated clearly so participants know what is expected of them and can prepare. 🏆 Set an agenda: This is an easy one, but you'd be shocked how often I see teams forego an agenda! Set one and stick to it, and make sure it's designed to guide the discussion. Include action-oriented prompts to keep participants on track. What do you think? Are these useful tips? If you want to dive even deeper into complex #USAID proposals, join me in the Advanced Technical Writing course I'm hosting with Susanne Barsoum this summer. We start next week, and there's still time to sign up. I've dropped the registration link in the comments 👇 #usaid #workwithusaid #proposaldevelopment #businessdevelopment #design #writing