AgentSkillsCN

proposal-builder

根据潜在客户的实际情况,生成定制化的销售方案、商业案例以及高管摘要。每当销售代表需要撰写方案、起草商业案例、为交易打造高管摘要、拟定商业提案,或说出“为 [公司] 撰写方案”、“帮我构建商业案例”、“我需要一份方案文档”、“为这笔交易制作高管摘要”时,均可使用此技能。此外,当您构建 SOW 概要、投资论证,或共同行动计划时,亦可触发此技能。

SKILL.md
--- frontmatter
name: proposal-builder
description: Generate customized sales proposals, business cases, and executive summaries tailored to the prospect's situation. Use this skill whenever a rep needs to create a proposal, write a business case, build an executive summary for a deal, draft a commercial proposal, or says "write a proposal for [company]", "help me build a business case", "I need a proposal document", or "create an executive summary for this deal". Also trigger when building SOW outlines, investment justifications, or mutual action plans.

Proposal Builder

Create compelling, customized proposals that speak directly to the prospect's situation, pain points, and desired outcomes. A great proposal isn't a product brochure — it's a mirror that shows the prospect their own problems and a clear path to solving them.

Philosophy

The best proposals follow this structure: "Here's what you told us is broken → Here's what it's costing you → Here's how we fix it → Here's what success looks like → Here's the investment." Every section connects back to what the prospect said during discovery.


How It Works

code
┌─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┐
│                     PROPOSAL BUILDER                              │
├─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│  DOCUMENT TYPES                                                   │
│  1. Full Proposal — Comprehensive document for formal evaluation │
│  2. Executive Summary — 1-2 page overview for senior stakeholders│
│  3. Business Case — ROI-focused justification document            │
│  4. Mutual Action Plan — Shared timeline to close                │
│  5. SOW Outline — Statement of work framework                    │
├─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│  DELIVERY                                                         │
│  • Markdown for quick review and iteration                       │
│  • Word document (.docx) for formal delivery                     │
│  • PDF for polished final version                                │
├─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┤
│  SUPERCHARGED (when you connect your tools)                      │
│  + ~~CRM: Deal data, pricing, stage, and timeline                │
│  + ~~CRM: Contact roles and stakeholder mapping                  │
│  + ~~CRM: Company profile and industry context                   │
│  + ~~conversation intelligence (Gong): Discovery transcripts     │
│  + ~~conversation intelligence (Gong): Prospect's own words      │
│  + ~~data enrichment (ZoomInfo): Company research and tech stack │
│  + ~~data enrichment (Clay): Company enrichment and signals      │
│  + ~~data enrichment (LinkedIn): Prospect profiles and activity  │
│  + ~~chat: Internal deal discussions and context                 │
│  + ~~calendar/email: Prior correspondence with prospect          │
└─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────┘

Getting Started

  • "Write a proposal for [Company] — here's what I know..."
  • "Build a business case for the VP of Finance at [Company]"
  • "Create an executive summary for this deal"
  • "Help me outline a mutual action plan"
  • "Draft an SOW for our [product] implementation"

Execution Flow

Step 0: Automatic Data Pull (Before Asking the User Anything)

CRITICAL: Before asking for deal context, pull everything from connected tools. The best proposals are grounded in real deal data and the prospect's own words from discovery.

CRM Data Pull

Check if you have access to CRM tools (look for tools containing search_crm_objects, get_crm_objects, or similar).

If CRM tools ARE available:

  1. Find the deal. Search deals for the company/deal name the user mentioned.
    • Properties: dealname, amount, dealstage, closedate, createdate, pipeline, hubspot_owner_id, dealtype, description, notes_last_contacted, num_notes
  2. Pull contacts. Get associated contacts for the deal.
    • Properties: firstname, lastname, jobtitle, email, phone, company, lifecyclestage
    • Map roles: Who is the champion? Economic buyer? Technical evaluator? Who will read this proposal?
  3. Pull company. Get associated company data.
    • Properties: name, domain, industry, numberofemployees, annualrevenue, description, about_us, founded_year, country
    • Use this for the "Understanding Your Situation" section
  4. Pull deal notes. If notes exist, extract discovery context, pain points, and decision criteria.

Sales Intelligence Data Pull

ZoomInfo (if available):

  1. Research the company. Use zoominfo_search_company with the prospect company name/domain.
    • Revenue, funding, employee count, industry — feeds the "Understanding Your Situation" section
  2. Get tech stack. Use zoominfo_get_tech_stack for the prospect company.
    • Current tools → feeds competitive positioning and integration sections

Clay (if available):

  1. Enrich the company. Use clay_enrich_company with the prospect company domain.
    • Additional company context, signals, and enrichment data

LinkedIn (if available):

  1. Get prospect profiles. Use linkedin_get_profile for key stakeholders who will read the proposal.
    • Titles, tenure, background — personalize the proposal for each reader
  2. Search company updates. Use linkedin_search_companies for recent company news.
    • Recent events, initiatives, and strategic moves to reference in the proposal

Gong Data Pull

Check if you have access to Gong tools (look for tools prefixed with gong_).

If Gong tools ARE available:

  1. Find discovery calls. Use gong_search_calls with the company name and deal date range.
  2. Pull transcripts. Use gong_get_transcript on discovery and demo calls.
    • Extract: prospect's own words about pain points, goals, and desired outcomes
    • Extract: specific metrics, costs, and numbers the prospect mentioned
    • Extract: decision criteria discussed
    • Extract: objections or concerns raised
  3. Use prospect quotes directly in the proposal — nothing is more powerful than their own words reflected back.

Calendar/Email Data Pull

If calendar/email tools are available (outlook_calendar_search, outlook_email_search):

  1. Search email history with the prospect for shared materials, requirements, or follow-up notes
  2. Check for any RFP or evaluation criteria documents exchanged

Chat Data Pull

If chat tools are available (slack_search_public, slack_search_public_and_private):

  1. Search for the deal/company name in sales channels
  2. Surface internal insights about competitive situation, pricing discussions, or stakeholder dynamics

Present What You Found

"I pulled deal context for [Company]: a $[X] deal in [Stage] stage. Per CRM, the key contacts are [Name, Title] and [Name, Title]. Per ZoomInfo, they're a [industry] company with [N] employees and $[X]M revenue. [If Gong:] I found [N] call transcripts — key pain points include [topics]. Building your proposal now..."

Step 1: Gather Remaining Context

After the auto-pull, ask ONLY for what the tools couldn't provide:

  • Pricing structure — If not in CRM deal data
  • Specific solution components — What exactly are you proposing?
  • Document type preference — Full proposal, executive summary, business case, or MAP?
  • Qualitative context — Anything not captured in CRM/Gong (personal dynamics, unofficial concerns)

Step 2: Generate the Proposal

Build using ALL evidence. Cite sources when referencing data: "Per CRM:", "Per Gong:", "Per ZoomInfo:", "Per LinkedIn:". Use prospect quotes from Gong transcripts throughout.

Step 3: Store Insights

  • Update memory/deal-patterns.md with proposal themes that resonate
  • Log the proposal in memory/changelog.md

What I Need From You (When Tools Aren't Connected)

The quality of the proposal is directly proportional to the discovery context you provide:

Must have:

  1. Company name and context — Who they are and what they do
  2. The problem — What's broken, in their words if possible
  3. Your solution — What you're proposing and why it fits
  4. Key stakeholders — Who will read this, what they care about
  5. Pricing — Investment amount and structure

Makes it much better:

  • Discovery call notes or transcript
  • Their stated decision criteria
  • Competitor they're evaluating
  • Timeline and urgency drivers
  • Specific ROI metrics or goals they mentioned
  • Their current solution/process and its shortcomings

Output Format: Full Proposal

markdown
# Proposal: [Your Solution] for [Company Name]

**Prepared for:** [Primary Contact, Title]
**Prepared by:** [Your Name, Title, Your Company]
**Date:** [Date]
**Valid through:** [Expiry date]

---

## Executive Summary

[2-3 paragraphs that summarize: their challenge, the proposed solution, expected outcomes, and the investment. A busy executive should be able to read just this page and understand the entire proposal.]

---

## Understanding Your Situation

[Reflect back what you learned in discovery. Use their language. Show you listened.]

### Current Challenges
[Describe their pain points as they described them]

### Impact on Your Business
[Quantify the cost of inaction — time, money, opportunity cost, risk]

### What Success Looks Like
[Their stated goals and desired outcomes]

---

## Proposed Solution

### Overview
[High-level description of what you're proposing — focused on outcomes, not features]

### How It Works
[Concise explanation of the solution approach]

### Why This Approach
[Connect your solution directly to their stated challenges]

### Key Capabilities
| Their Need | Our Solution | Expected Outcome |
|------------|-------------|------------------|
| [Need 1] | [Capability] | [Result] |
| [Need 2] | [Capability] | [Result] |
| [Need 3] | [Capability] | [Result] |

---

## Implementation Plan

| Phase | Timeline | Activities | Milestone |
|-------|----------|------------|-----------|
| Phase 1: [Name] | [Weeks] | [Key activities] | [Deliverable] |
| Phase 2: [Name] | [Weeks] | [Key activities] | [Deliverable] |
| Phase 3: [Name] | [Weeks] | [Key activities] | [Deliverable] |

---

## Expected Outcomes

### Quantified Benefits
[ROI projections, efficiency gains, cost savings — tied to their metrics]

### Qualitative Benefits
[Team impact, strategic positioning, risk reduction]

### Timeline to Value
[When they can expect to see results]

---

## Investment

| Component | Details | Investment |
|-----------|---------|------------|
| [Line item 1] | [Description] | [$ amount] |
| [Line item 2] | [Description] | [$ amount] |
| **Total** | | **[$ total]** |

**Payment Terms:** [Structure]
**Contract Term:** [Duration]

---

## Why [Your Company]

[Brief — 3-4 points on why you're the right partner. Social proof, relevant experience, differentiators. Not a corporate brochure.]

### Relevant Customer Success
[One or two short examples of similar customers and their results]

---

## Next Steps

1. [Specific action with date]
2. [Second action]
3. [Third action]

---

## Appendix (if needed)

- Detailed technical specifications
- Full ROI model
- Customer references
- Team bios

Document Variations

Executive Summary (1-2 pages)

For senior stakeholders who won't read the full proposal. Hits: problem, solution, outcomes, investment, next steps. Everything in one or two pages.

Business Case

ROI-focused document for financial stakeholders. Heavy on metrics, cost analysis, payback period, and risk mitigation. Less about the product, more about the investment thesis.

Mutual Action Plan

Shared document between you and the prospect outlining every step from now to close. Includes owners, dates, and dependencies. Creates accountability on both sides.

SOW Outline

Implementation-focused document with scope, deliverables, timeline, responsibilities, and acceptance criteria. Used when the prospect is ready to move forward and needs the "how."


Personalization Rules

The proposal should feel like it was written specifically for this prospect because it was:

  1. Use their company name throughout — not generic "the customer"
  2. Quote their words — reference specific things they said in discovery
  3. Match their priorities — lead with what matters most to them
  4. Address their concerns — proactively respond to known objections
  5. Speak their language — match industry terminology and tone

Related Skills

  • roi-calculator — Generate the ROI analysis for the business case section
  • discovery-guide — Better discovery leads to better proposals
  • deal-qualification — Ensure the deal is qualified before investing in a proposal
  • battle-cards — Incorporate competitive positioning if needed