Account executives, Founders, Consultants, Sales managers, Revenue teams
Prepare the Required Inputs listed in the Workflow Prompt. Use as much detail as necessary.
1. Copy the Workflow Prompt.
2. Paste it into your AI tool.
3. Replace the "Required Inputs"
4. Run the prompt.
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You are a sales proposal strategist. Your task is to adapt a proposal for a specific industry while keeping the recommendation credible, buyer-relevant, and grounded in the information provided.
### Required Input
- Offer: [What is being proposed]
- Target Industry: [Industry or vertical, e.g. healthcare clinics, logistics, professional services]
- Buyer Role: [Decision maker or evaluator role]
- Base Proposal Content: [Paste the existing proposal, outline, or key sections]
- Buyer Needs: [Known needs, pains, goals, or desired outcomes]
- Industry Context: [Known pressures, risks, regulations, customer expectations, or state unknown]
- Proof Available: [Relevant examples, case studies, metrics, or none]
- Tone: [Executive, consultative, formal, plainspoken]
### Input Validation
Review all inputs before adapting the proposal. If the target industry, buyer needs, base proposal content, or offer are missing or too broad, ask specific clarification questions. Pause and wait for clarification before producing the final output.
### Instructions
Adapt the proposal so it feels written for the buyer's industry, not merely renamed for it. Adjust language, priorities, examples, risks, proof placement, and success measures based on the industry context provided.
Do not rely on stereotypes or unsupported industry claims. If industry-specific assumptions are necessary, label them clearly and include validation questions. Do not mention regulations, benchmarks, or market conditions unless they are provided or framed as assumptions to confirm.
Prioritise what the buyer in that industry is likely to care about: operational reliability, compliance exposure, customer experience, margin pressure, staffing constraints, speed, visibility, safety, auditability, adoption, or service consistency.
Identify which parts of the base proposal should stay the same, which should be rewritten, and which should be removed because they are not relevant to the industry.
Make the output useful for proposal editing. Provide replacement language for key sections instead of only general advice.
### Output
Provide the adapted proposal guidance in this format:
1. Industry Adaptation Summary
2. Buyer Priorities for This Industry
3. Proposal Sections to Keep
4. Proposal Sections to Rewrite
5. Replacement Language for Key Sections
6. Industry-Specific Risks or Constraints to Address
7. Proof or Examples to Use
8. Claims or Assumptions to Avoid
9. Validation Questions Before Sending
10. Final Industry-Specific Positioning Statement
Create two additional versions for adjacent industries using the same base proposal.
Required inputs used:
Offer: Workforce scheduling and utilisation platform
Target Industry: Multi-location healthcare clinics
Buyer Role: Chief Operating Officer
Base Proposal Content: Executive summary, current scheduling challenges, recommended platform, implementation plan, reporting dashboards, pricing, proof, and next steps.
Buyer Needs: Reduce scheduling gaps, improve staff utilisation, increase visibility across clinic locations, reduce manager admin time, and maintain service consistency.
Industry Context: Clinics must balance patient access, provider availability, staffing constraints, and operational consistency. Compliance requirements may apply, but specific regulations have not been provided.
Proof Available: Case example from a 12-location outpatient services group that reduced manual schedule changes and improved manager visibility.
Tone: Executive and consultative
The proposal should be adapted so it feels built for healthcare clinic operations rather than generic workforce management. The strongest angle is operational reliability: helping leaders match staff capacity to patient demand, reduce avoidable scheduling disruption, and give regional managers better visibility across locations.
The adaptation should avoid unsupported claims about healthcare compliance or patient outcomes unless the buyer confirms the relevant standards and available evidence. The proposal should instead focus on scheduling consistency, staffing visibility, administrative efficiency, and service continuity.
Executive Summary:
Keep this section, but rewrite it around clinic coverage, operational visibility, and staffing consistency rather than general productivity.
Current Challenges:
Keep this section if it reflects the buyer’s real scheduling issues. Make sure examples are clinic-specific, such as last-minute coverage gaps, inconsistent manager processes, and limited visibility across locations.
Recommended Platform:
Keep the recommendation, but frame features in terms of clinic operations rather than generic workforce management.
Implementation Plan:
Keep this section because healthcare operations buyers need confidence that rollout will not disrupt daily clinic activity.
Reporting Dashboards:
Keep and emphasise dashboards for location-level coverage, utilisation, scheduling changes, and staffing exceptions.
Pricing:
Keep pricing after value, scope, and implementation confidence have been established.
Proof:
Keep proof, especially the outpatient services example, but be clear about what was achieved and what is comparable.
Next Steps:
Keep and make the decision path practical for a COO, regional operations leader, and clinic manager group.
Generic productivity language:
Rewrite to focus on patient access, clinic coverage, manager workload, and operational consistency.
Feature-heavy platform descriptions:
Rewrite into outcome-based explanations. For example, do not simply say “real-time scheduling dashboard.” Say “regional leaders can see open shifts, coverage gaps, and location-level pressure before they become service disruptions.”
Broad automation claims:
Rewrite to explain exactly what scheduling tasks can be automated or standardised.
Compliance language:
Rewrite cautiously. If compliance requirements are unknown, refer to configurable approval paths, role-based access, and reporting logs as capabilities to validate, not guaranteed compliance outcomes.
Proof section:
Rewrite to explain why the outpatient services example is relevant to multi-location clinic operations.
Replacement Executive Summary:
Your clinics are operating in an environment where staffing decisions directly affect service consistency, manager workload, and patient access. The proposed scheduling and utilisation platform is designed to give leadership clearer visibility across locations, reduce manual scheduling coordination, and help clinic managers respond faster to coverage gaps. Rather than relying on spreadsheets, emails, and local workarounds, the platform creates a more consistent operating model for scheduling decisions across the clinic network.
Replacement Problem Statement:
Today, scheduling appears to depend heavily on local manager effort and manual coordination. That creates several operational risks: limited visibility for regional leaders, inconsistent scheduling practices across clinics, slow response to coverage gaps, and unnecessary administrative time for managers. As the clinic network grows or demand fluctuates, these issues become harder to manage through manual processes alone.
Replacement Recommendation:
We recommend implementing the workforce scheduling and utilisation platform in phases, beginning with a pilot group of clinics. This approach allows the team to validate workflows, confirm reporting needs, train managers, and refine scheduling rules before expanding across all locations. The goal is to improve schedule visibility and consistency without creating unnecessary disruption to daily clinic operations.
Replacement Value Section:
The primary value is operational control. Leaders gain a clearer view of staffing coverage, managers spend less time reconciling schedules manually, and clinics can respond more quickly when availability changes. Over time, this supports more consistent service delivery and better use of staff capacity across locations.
Replacement Proof Section:
A comparable 12-location outpatient services group used the platform to reduce manual schedule changes and improve manager visibility into open coverage needs. While each clinic network has different staffing rules and demand patterns, this example is relevant because it involved multi-location scheduling, operational manager adoption, and leadership visibility across sites.
Replacement Next Step:
The recommended next step is a 45-minute implementation alignment session with operations leadership, one regional manager, and two clinic managers. The purpose is to confirm scheduling workflows, pilot clinic selection, reporting priorities, and any constraints that must be addressed before rollout.
For multi-location healthcare clinics, this platform is best positioned as an operational visibility and scheduling consistency solution. It helps leaders see staffing pressure earlier, gives clinic managers a clearer process for managing schedules, and supports more consistent service delivery across locations. The proposal should lead with reliability, visibility, and manager efficiency rather than generic productivity or software automation claims.
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