Facebook tracking pixel Proposal Workflow | Conversion System Skip to main content

Proof Asset

Show the follow-up path.

A proposal workflow should make the next action obvious after send. The useful view is not a pretty pipeline. It is a simple path showing owner, buyer input, risk, review date, and what happens next.

Direct answer

A proposal workflow should start after send.

The workflow should show who owns the proposal, what the buyer still needs to provide, which internal review is required, why the deal is at risk, and what action happens next.

Sent

The proposal has a sent date, buyer role, internal owner, decision path, and expected response window.

  • Sent date
  • Buyer role
  • Owner

Waiting on input

The team can see which specs, site facts, drawings, budget confirmation, or procurement details are missing.

  • Specs
  • Site facts
  • Budget

Action due

The next step is visible: follow up, escalate, revise, schedule review, wait, or close the loop.

  • Follow up
  • Escalate
  • Review

Workflow diagram

Keep the path simple enough to run weekly.

This is the practical sequence a team can inspect during the audit. Each step should have an owner and a clear reason for moving forward.

1. Proposal sent

Record what was sent, who received it, what assumptions were included, and what response date matters.

  • Scope
  • Assumptions
  • Response date

2. Buyer input check

Confirm whether the buyer owes technical details, site inputs, commercial approval, procurement steps, or stakeholder feedback.

  • Inputs
  • Approval
  • Feedback

3. Risk review

Flag the reason a proposal may stall: no owner, no response, missing input, plan change, budget concern, or decision delay.

  • Risk reason
  • Owner
  • Deadline

4. Next action

Assign the action that keeps the opportunity honest: follow up, revise, escalate, schedule review, wait, or close the loop.

  • Action
  • Date
  • Outcome

Review rhythm

The weekly view should show exceptions.

Leadership should not review every proposal line by line. The workflow should surface proposals that are late, unclear, ownerless, or valuable enough to deserve attention.

Late response

The expected buyer response date has passed and the next owner action is not complete.

  • Response date
  • Owner action
  • Escalation

Missing input

The proposal cannot move because the buyer, partner, estimator, or specialist still owes context.

  • Input owner
  • Missing item
  • Due date

High-value risk

The opportunity is valuable enough that proposal risk should be visible to leadership before it goes stale.

  • Value
  • Risk
  • Leadership review

Next step

Start with the audit.

If there is a measurable revenue problem worth fixing, the Revenue Audit shows whether a Revenue System Sprint is the right next move.

Apply for a Revenue Audit