Chris Rempel
02-26-2006, 06:29 PM
How to Write an Absolutely Irresistible Joint Venture Proposal
Copyright 2006 by Chris Rempel
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Brief Description: Discover some of the highly effective persuasion techniques that will turn your joint venture proposals into profit-pulling partnerships, time and time again.
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Writing a joint venture proposal is really just a fancy way of
saying to your potential partner, “Hey, let’s do a deal.”
In fact, I’ve had far more success with brief, to-the-point
proposals than I ever have with a stereotypical ten-page document
packed full of corporate jargon.
The truth of the matter is that regardless of who your potential
partner may be - whether they’re an ezine publisher, a competing
business owner or even if they’re the CEO of a Fortune 500 company
– they’re all going to be asking themselves the same question when
they receive your proposal:
“What’s in this for me?”
More specifically, they’ll be wondering exactly how you might be
able to benefit them and their company.
Therefore, the most crucial component of your proposal is obviously
going to be explaining “what’s in it for them”. Now, before I get
into more details about this, it is important to note that you must
have something of great value to offer your potential partner.
It is absolutely crucial that your offer is laser-targeted,
relevant and highly beneficial to their clients – as well as very
lucrative for your potential partner. It’s also very important to
research your potential partner (and their company) in order to see
what they would most likely be looking for – and it’s not always
more money, believe it or not.
With this in mind, let’s take a look at how to write your proposal
so that it pushes your partner’s “buttons” – to the point where
they’d have to be insane to turn down your offer...
What is your potential partner looking for specifically?
Find this out by talking to them, reading their mission statement
and researching them – as well as how they make decisions. This
will reveal the “button” that you’ll need to press as you describe
the benefits of the partnership (ie. more profits, something new to
offer their clients, giving their business a new edge on
competition, etc.)
Make an offer they can’t refuse. Again, this will also take
some research, but within reason, you should bend over backwards to
accommodate your potential partner and make it as profitable for
them as possible. Remember that the clients you acquire from a
joint venture will purchase from you again and again – and it’s
usually the “backend profits” after the JV where the real money
gets made...
Make it as easy as possible for them to say “yes”. People in
general are obnoxiously lazy. Many of my proposals have been
rejected simply because it either seemed too complicated – or it
sounded like too much work to them, regardless of how lucrative it
was. Simplify your proposal, and if necessary, take on the majority
of the workload – remember that you’re sitting on a goldmine!
Show them the money. Don’t be vague when it comes to
potential earnings. Logically explain to your prospect how much
they could reasonably earn from the partnership. It is very
important that you do not simply make an “educated guess” – base
your predictions entirely on your current marketing stats, sales
conversion rates and other real data. This is likely the most
overlooked – yet crucial – part of any given JV proposal.
Be personal. A “canned” or impersonal proposal likely won’t
even make it more than ten seconds before getting tossed in the
garbage. Relate to your prospect and emphasize their values by
validating their interests, goals and passions. Also, if you want
to really make an impact, send your proposal as a hard copy via
FedEx. Email is simply too easy to ignore, erase or forget about.
Add a real sense of urgency. You want to subtly hint to your
potential partner that you won’t wait long to hear back from them –
which is true, because if they say “no”, you’ll have to find
someone else anyway. Word this in such a way that it compels them
to action either way – but don’t be overbearing, deceptive or
unrealistic.* * *
And most importantly, build rapport with your prospect. You
must understand that the majority of business people – especially
those that are very successful – would much rather work with
someone that they know, like and trust than a complete stranger. In
fact, it’s crucial that you do this before you even send them a
proposal...
Well, there you go.
You now have everything you need to start easily persuading
potential partners to do business with you – as well as
putting together some obscenely profitable joint ventures.
Apply these tactics to your own business development strategy
and watch your response rates skyrocket!
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Chris Rempel recently grilled an undercover Joint Venture genius with 15 of the toughest JV-related questions he could possibly come up with...
Download a free copy of the interview (if it's still available) at http://www.jv-web.com/ghowes/
-------------------------------------------------------------------
You may freely reprint this article exactly as is, so long as the article is unchanged and the author byline remains fully intact, verbatim as it appears above.
The "Brief Description" before the main article body is optional - you do not have to include it if you do not want to.
Copyright 2006 by Chris Rempel
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Brief Description: Discover some of the highly effective persuasion techniques that will turn your joint venture proposals into profit-pulling partnerships, time and time again.
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Writing a joint venture proposal is really just a fancy way of
saying to your potential partner, “Hey, let’s do a deal.”
In fact, I’ve had far more success with brief, to-the-point
proposals than I ever have with a stereotypical ten-page document
packed full of corporate jargon.
The truth of the matter is that regardless of who your potential
partner may be - whether they’re an ezine publisher, a competing
business owner or even if they’re the CEO of a Fortune 500 company
– they’re all going to be asking themselves the same question when
they receive your proposal:
“What’s in this for me?”
More specifically, they’ll be wondering exactly how you might be
able to benefit them and their company.
Therefore, the most crucial component of your proposal is obviously
going to be explaining “what’s in it for them”. Now, before I get
into more details about this, it is important to note that you must
have something of great value to offer your potential partner.
It is absolutely crucial that your offer is laser-targeted,
relevant and highly beneficial to their clients – as well as very
lucrative for your potential partner. It’s also very important to
research your potential partner (and their company) in order to see
what they would most likely be looking for – and it’s not always
more money, believe it or not.
With this in mind, let’s take a look at how to write your proposal
so that it pushes your partner’s “buttons” – to the point where
they’d have to be insane to turn down your offer...
What is your potential partner looking for specifically?
Find this out by talking to them, reading their mission statement
and researching them – as well as how they make decisions. This
will reveal the “button” that you’ll need to press as you describe
the benefits of the partnership (ie. more profits, something new to
offer their clients, giving their business a new edge on
competition, etc.)
Make an offer they can’t refuse. Again, this will also take
some research, but within reason, you should bend over backwards to
accommodate your potential partner and make it as profitable for
them as possible. Remember that the clients you acquire from a
joint venture will purchase from you again and again – and it’s
usually the “backend profits” after the JV where the real money
gets made...
Make it as easy as possible for them to say “yes”. People in
general are obnoxiously lazy. Many of my proposals have been
rejected simply because it either seemed too complicated – or it
sounded like too much work to them, regardless of how lucrative it
was. Simplify your proposal, and if necessary, take on the majority
of the workload – remember that you’re sitting on a goldmine!
Show them the money. Don’t be vague when it comes to
potential earnings. Logically explain to your prospect how much
they could reasonably earn from the partnership. It is very
important that you do not simply make an “educated guess” – base
your predictions entirely on your current marketing stats, sales
conversion rates and other real data. This is likely the most
overlooked – yet crucial – part of any given JV proposal.
Be personal. A “canned” or impersonal proposal likely won’t
even make it more than ten seconds before getting tossed in the
garbage. Relate to your prospect and emphasize their values by
validating their interests, goals and passions. Also, if you want
to really make an impact, send your proposal as a hard copy via
FedEx. Email is simply too easy to ignore, erase or forget about.
Add a real sense of urgency. You want to subtly hint to your
potential partner that you won’t wait long to hear back from them –
which is true, because if they say “no”, you’ll have to find
someone else anyway. Word this in such a way that it compels them
to action either way – but don’t be overbearing, deceptive or
unrealistic.* * *
And most importantly, build rapport with your prospect. You
must understand that the majority of business people – especially
those that are very successful – would much rather work with
someone that they know, like and trust than a complete stranger. In
fact, it’s crucial that you do this before you even send them a
proposal...
Well, there you go.
You now have everything you need to start easily persuading
potential partners to do business with you – as well as
putting together some obscenely profitable joint ventures.
Apply these tactics to your own business development strategy
and watch your response rates skyrocket!
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Chris Rempel recently grilled an undercover Joint Venture genius with 15 of the toughest JV-related questions he could possibly come up with...
Download a free copy of the interview (if it's still available) at http://www.jv-web.com/ghowes/
-------------------------------------------------------------------
You may freely reprint this article exactly as is, so long as the article is unchanged and the author byline remains fully intact, verbatim as it appears above.
The "Brief Description" before the main article body is optional - you do not have to include it if you do not want to.