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Soon Seah Toh
Soon Seah Toh

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The Proposal Cycle Is the Next Thing AI Eats

Business handshake over a contract

If your proposal team still takes six weeks per RFP, you are about to lose a lot of deals.

Not because your competitors got cheaper. Because they got faster, more honest, and more specific. All at the same time.

This is what is happening in the field right now.

We just shipped thirteen enterprise proposals in six weeks. Telcos, universities, government agencies, regional MNCs across Southeast Asia. Real ones. Some over 5,000 lines of detailed solution design. A year ago that workload was eighteen months and twelve people. We did it with four.

Here is what changed.

The proposal is not written by a solution architect anymore. It is drafted by AI grounded in our actual product source code and capability matrix. A human reviews, shapes, and signs off. Customer comments come back, AI suggests refinements, human approves. Days. Sometimes hours.

Now the uncomfortable part for everyone still doing it the old way.

Your proposal is going to be evaluated by an AI on the customer side. The big procurement teams are already piloting it. Three competing proposals get fed into a model that compares scope, pricing, capability mapping, technical depth, risk disclosure. The honest, specific, source-code-grounded proposal wins that comparison every single time. The other two get summarised as "vague, hedged, padding."

Most enterprise proposals lie by omission. They claim capabilities the product does not have. They use vague verbs to avoid commitment. They run forty pages of context before saying anything specific. AI on the customer side strips all of that out and ranks what is left.

If your proposal still does any of these, it is going to lose:

→ Capability claims without numbers
→ Forty pages of consultant flannel before page one of substance
→ Refusal to say what you do not do
→ Generic boilerplate copy-pasted from the previous deal
→ Pricing that hides the actual cost behind footnotes

The only proposals that will survive the next twelve months are the ones written with the discipline of a code review. Specific. Grounded. Honest about the gaps. Fast.

This is a deliberate choice. NetGain made the call eighteen months ago that the proposal cycle was the most overlooked bottleneck in enterprise sales, and that AI grounded in real product capability would change the economics of how we win. It has. The customers feel it on the first read.

If you are running a proposal team in 2026 and your average cycle is still measured in weeks, you have maybe twelve months before this catches you. Probably less.

The proposal cycle is the next thing AI eats. Most companies have not noticed.

Go build before someone else does.


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