proposal letter. instructions and my notes use for proposal. read attached files

GREEN LEVEL STRATEGIES 4










Green Level Strategies

Writing it with these notes!!!

Green Level Strategies

The Green Level Strategies are designed to help a writer with the writing process’s prewriting and planning phases. These techniques help one deal with persuasion scenarios, clarify the communication intent and objectives, and improve the Yellow, Orange, and Red Level Color Strategies.

The Green Level Strategies include creating a clear objective, aligning objectives and accounting for the differences, identifying and emphasizing the competitive and meaningful strengths, create concrete images, and motivating the action.

For this case, the two specific examples will include;

  1. identifying and emphasizing the competitive and meaningful strengths.

  2. Aligning the objectives and accounting for the differences.


  1. Identifying and Emphasizing the competitive and meaningful strengths

One of the persuasive techniques to use throughout the proposal is identifying and emphasizing the competitive advantages and meaningful strengths. This technique involves identifying which advantages and strengths the proposal has and presenting them to the conference organizers clearly and explicitly. It would be best to take every opportunity to persuade the organizers about these advantages by weaving them throughout the proposal.


There is a need to determine and identify the issue that needs to be addressed. To persuade the organizers that I can solve the dilemma, I must demonstrate that I have a thorough understanding of it.

It is also essential to describe how the suggested proposal can address the issue and have measurable benefits. It is necessary to indicate how it can achieve the goals and adhere to the problem description’s constraints. I will include detailed examples and demonstrate the distinctions between “as things are now” and “how they should be.”

The proposal should be as quantitative as possible but use all available persuasion techniques. It is essential to make the proposed idea’s outcomes, advantages, and viability a priority.


  1. Aligning the Objectives and accounting for the differences

Before writing, aligning objectives involves identifying and considering the organizer’s expectations, objectives, and motives to align my goals with theirs. Accounting for inconsistencies between my expectations and the organizer’s goals is one way to solve, reconcile, or eliminate any gaps between my objectives and those of the organizers. This approach will create a win-win scenario for both the organizers and me.

There is a need to describe the planned project in detail, including the proposal’s work scope. It is usually better to start with a broad overview of the concept and then break it down into more specific sub-sections.




The Green Level Strategies are designed to help a writer with the writing process’s prewriting and planning phases. These techniques help one deal with persuasion scenarios, clarify the communication intent and objectives, and improve the Yellow, Orange, and Red Level strategies. 

The Green Level Strategies include creating a clear objective, aligning objectives and accounting for the differences, identifying and emphasizing the competitive and meaningful strengths, create concrete images, and motivating the action.

For this case, the two specific examples will include 

  •                Identifying and emphasizing the competitive and meaningful strengths.

  •          Aligning the objectives and accounting for the differences.

 

     Identifying and Emphasizing the competitive and meaningful strengths

One of the persuasive techniques to use throughout the proposal is identifying and emphasizing the competitive advantages and meaningful strengths. This technique involves identifying which advantages and strengths the proposal has and presenting them to the conference organizers clearly and explicitly. It would be best to take every opportunity to persuade the organizers about these advantages by weaving them throughout the proposal.

 

There is a need to determine and identify the issue that needs to be addressed. To persuade the organizers that I can solve the dilemma, I would have to demonstrate that I have a thorough understanding of it.

It is also essential to describe how the suggested proposal can address the issue and have measurable benefits. It is necessary to indicate how it can achieve the goals and adhere to the problem description’s constraints. I will include detailed examples and demonstrate the distinctions between “as things are now” and “how they should be.”

The proposal should be as quantitative as possible but use all available persuasion techniques. It is important to make the proposed idea’s outcomes, advantages, and viability a priority.