Ever wondered why your proposals never get a reply?
1. It feels generic
Clients can tell when your intro is copied from another proposal. Skip the "I'm so excited to apply..." part - start by showing you actually read their brief
2. It doesn't talk about them
Most freelancers focus on themselves - their skills, their portfolio - and forget to mention how they'll solve the client's problem.
3. It's too long to read
Nobody wants to scroll through an essay. Short, clear paragraphs win every time.
4. No clear structure
Big blocks of text = instant skip. Use bullet points, spacing, or bold keywords to make it easy to scan.
5. No personality
Al-style proposals sound robotic. Add a bit of your tone, your approach, your way of thinking - that's what clients remember.
6. Too much fluff not enough value
Buzzwords like "innovative", "dynamic", and "resultsdriven" don't mean much without proof. Show, don't tell.
7. Missing connection
A good proposal feels like a conversation, not a template. Ask smart questions about the project it shows you care.
8. No call to action
End your message with something simple and direct: "Would you like to jump on a quick call to discuss this?" works far better than silence.
9. Irrelevant examples
Don't list every project you've done. Mention only what's most similar to their needs.
10. It doesn't stand out visually
Formatting matters. A clean, well-structured proposal looks more professional - and gets read.
Write for the client, not for yourself.
Be brief, be relevant, and sound human. That's what turns a "seen" into a "let's talk."