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1. Developing Proposals Winning Your Audience
2. Design Activities
3. Engineering Behaviors - Technical Analyst
Searches strategically to identify all conditions, phenomena, and assumptions influencing the situation
Problem Solver
Examines problem setting to understand critical issues, assumptions, limitations, and solution requirements
Designer
Searches widely to determine stakeholder needs, existing solutions, and constraints on solutions
Formulates clear design goals, solutions specifications (including cost, performance, manufacturability, sustainability, social impact) and constraints that must be satisfied to yield a valuable design solution
Thinks independently, cooperatively, and creatively to identify relevant existing ideas and generate original solution ideas
Researcher
Formulates research questions that identify relevant hypotheses or other new knowledge sought
4. Engineering Behaviors Professional and Interpersonal Communicator
Prepares a message with the content, organization, format, and quality fitting the audience and purpose
Delivers a message with timeliness, credibility, and engagement that achieves desired outcomes efficiently
Leader
Facilitates and articulates a shared vision valued by targeted individuals, groups, or organizations
Self-Grower
Takes ownership for ones own personal and professional status and growth
Seeks out mentors to support and challenge future growth and development
Achiever
Accepts responsibility and takes ownership in assignments
Maintains focus to complete tasks on time amidst multiple demands
Practitioner
Brings responsible engineering perspectives to global and societal issues
5. Proposals as Persuasion Goal: persuade audiences to act in a particular way:
To fund a project (e.g. asking a granting agency such as NSF to fund your research)
To approve a project (e.g. asking a manager within your department to approve a process modification)
To accept a product (e.g. trying to win a contract for a specific job)
6. Elements of Persuasion To persuade someone to decide in your favor, you need to convince them of several things:
That a need exists (research) or that you understand the need (contract)
That your proposed project meets that need
That your project is viable
That the benefits outweigh the costs
That you are capable of completing the project
Bottom Line: Do the benefits (tangible and intangible) outweigh the costs?
7. Expectations: Proposal Structures Summary brief statement of the need, the project, the benefits, and the costs
Statement of Need an explanation of why the work needs to be done
Research proposals: Prior work, background information, gaps, impacts
Contract proposals: Review of RFP/RFB
8. Expectations: Proposal Structure Statement of Need an explanation of why the work needs to be done
Research proposals: Prior work, background information, gaps, impacts
Contract proposals: Review of RFP/RFB
Your Proposal
What can you say about the need?
What research is required to support the need?
9. Structure of Proposals (contd) Project Description
Overview (what the project is)
Deliverables (concrete outcomes)
Justification (how it meets the need)
Benefits (why it is valuable/better)
Implementation or approach (the plan)
Schedule
Budget
Qualifications
10. Expectations: Deliverables Deliverables should be
Concrete
Measurable
Multi-stage
Final product
Substantial intermediate products leading to deliverable
11. Knowing Your Audience To persuade an audience to act, you need to first analyze that audience:
Who makes the final decision?
What is the audiences knowledge base?
Why does the audience care? What is their stake in the outcome?
What are the criteria (explicit and implicit) for decision-making?
What constrains the decision?
Is the decision merit-based or competitive?
What biases, values, predispositions, etc. does your audience have?
12. Building Common Ground To reach your audience, you need to think and write on their terms:
Use your audiences language
Explain all unfamiliar terms
Read between the lines and address the audiences values as well as their stated needs or expectations
13. Knowing Your Tools Winning proposals rely on three types of appeals:
Appeals to Logic
support your claims with the facts of the case
Appeals to Emotion
support your claims by connecting your work to your audiences value or beliefs
Appeals to Credibility
support your claims by helping the audience believe you
14. Tips for Developing Content Review all relevant documents from your audience
Research information to support both the need and the project description
Brainstorm all possible benefits and costs, and highlight those most important to your audience
15. Effective Research/Design Proposals
. Support the need for the project with a review of the relevant literature
Provide a concrete set of deliverables in response to the need, including sure bets as well as ideals
Demonstrate a well-thought-out approach to meeting the need
Give the reader confidence in the investigators knowledge and ability
Clearly account for all spending requests
16. Making Your Proposal Readable Use meaningful headings and subheadings to organize your text
Meaningless: Literature Review
Meaningful: Curriculum Planning in Engineering Since 1990
Use lists to help highlight key information
Deliverables
Critical needs
Benefits
Use graphics to illustrate key concepts
Use tables and charts to illustrate plans
Schedule
Budget