Guide To Writing Proposals

Proposals enable ideas to move forward if they are good enough for now, safe enough to try.

Bringing proposals to a meeting allows for agile and creative ways to progress work, bring new ideas and resolve tensions.

Everyone can contribute to the better running of their group or team. If you are sensing a tension in the way your team is operating, or have a new idea or spot an opportunity to do something is not currently covered properly, write a proposal!

You may not need to go through all of these steps below for every proposal, it depends on how complicated the issue is, or how elaborate the idea is.

Proposals should generally try to include the following:

Check in with a few other people

Ask for other people's thoughts and ideas. This helps to capture collective wisdom and build a culture of collaboration and joint ownership around proposals.

Redraft.

Circulate the proposal

Share to the wider team with enough notice for them to consider it properly before you meet.

Concerns/objections

Contact members of the circle who might object to the proposal, based on their feedback, to see if you can integrate their concerns in advance of the meeting. (This step is optional. It may be easier to process objections in a meeting.)

Bring to a meeting

Ask the Internal Coordinator or meeting facilitator to add your proposal to a meeting agenda. Then you can have your proposal processed using relevant decision-making processes. Depending on the response of the team, you may need to be open to amending your proposal or integrating objections.

Your proposal is adopted!


Revision #4
Created 30 April 2025 22:06:31 by Kay
Updated 1 May 2025 12:08:52 by Kay