Prosperus vs Google Docs for client proposals

Google Docs proposals work. You’ve sent them, clients have accepted them, and at some point it became the default. Here’s what you actually give up by staying with it.

Who each suits

Prosperus: Freelancers sending proposals regularly who want to know whether their proposal was opened, collect signatures in one step, and stop writing from scratch every time.

Google Docs: Freelancers just starting out or sending one or two proposals a month who do not yet need proposal-specific infrastructure.

Where Prosperus stands out

The AI generates a complete draft from your inputs in minutes. Client details, services, scope, and pricing assembled automatically. Package-based pricing, digital signatures, and open tracking are all built in. No blank page, no formatting step, no following up blind.

Bottom line

Google Docs is a reasonable starting point. It stops being enough when you start losing proposals and have no way to know whether the client opened them, which section they read, or when to follow up.

Feature comparison

Proposal creation

In Google Docs, you start from a blank page or an old proposal you are copy-pasting over. Every time. For most freelancers, that is between 45 minutes and two hours per proposal before anything goes out. Prosperus generates a complete draft from your inputs in minutes. Fill in the project brief, review what the AI has written, adjust anything that does not fit, and send. The difference is not the final document. It is the 90 minutes you get back every time you do this.

Branding and presentation

A Google Docs proposal looks like a Google Docs proposal. You can add a logo and change the header font, but you are working within a document format that was not designed for this. Prosperus presents proposals as a branded, multi-section experience: cover, services, pricing, timeline, case studies, and terms, styled with your logo, colours, and fonts. Clients open a browser link rather than a shared document. It does not look like something you formatted on a Tuesday evening. It looks like it came from someone who does this professionally.

Package pricing

There is no pricing structure in Google Docs. You write whatever you write: a number, a few line items, sometimes a breakdown. Clients see a single figure and make a decision. Prosperus builds package-based pricing into every proposal, with up to three tiers each having its own deliverables, payment schedule, and totals. Clients choose between options rather than reacting to one quoted price. “I’ll take the mid tier” is an easier decision than “let me think about whether this total feels right.”

Open tracking

Google Docs shows you whether someone opened the file. That is the extent of it. No detail on how long they spent, which sections they read, or how many times they came back. Prosperus tracks every open, every section, and how long the client spent on each part. Know if they opened it once quickly or returned four times and spent eight minutes on the pricing slide. That changes how and when you follow up. No more sending a “just checking in” message with no idea whether the proposal was ever looked at.

Digital signatures

There is no e-signature in Google Docs. When the client is ready to proceed, you need to export a PDF, email it, and either chase them to print, sign, and scan it back, or set up a separate signing tool and manage that handover on top of everything else. Prosperus has digital signatures inside the proposal view. The client reads the proposal, clicks accept, and signs in the same browser window. You get a notification when it is done. Nothing to export, nothing to chase, nothing extra to configure.

Where Google Docs wins

It is free and you already know how to use it. For a freelancer just starting out who sends one or two proposals a month, that is genuinely fine. The cost is not the price tag. It is the time writing each one from scratch and the complete silence after it goes out.

Where Prosperus wins

Everything after you hit send. You know when the proposal was opened, which sections the client spent time on, and how many times they came back. Follow-up reminders fire automatically. Instead of writing from scratch, you review and adjust a complete draft in minutes. For a freelancer sending proposals regularly, that is not a marginal improvement. It changes how the whole thing works.

Who should use Prosperus

Freelancers sending more than a couple of proposals a month who want information rather than silence. If you have ever sent a proposal, waited two weeks, and had no idea whether it was even opened. That is the exact problem Prosperus is built to fix.

Try Prosperus free for 7 days

No card required. Generate your first proposal in under 10 minutes.

FAQs

The cost of Google Docs is not money. It is between 45 and 90 minutes of writing and formatting per proposal, and no signal at all after you send it. No open tracking, no automatic follow-up, no e-signatures. Prosperus handles all three.

Yes. Every proposal has a unique client link that opens in a browser with no login required. It works like a shareable link, except it tracks engagement, lets the client select a package, and collects a digital signature.

Yes. Proposals render as a branded, multi-section experience: cover, services, pricing, timeline, case studies, and terms, styled with your logo, colours, and fonts. It does not look like a document. It looks like a proposal.

About 10 minutes to add your services and set your brand colours and logo. After that, proposals generate from your inputs in a few minutes. Your first will take slightly longer than your tenth.

The AI generates a starting draft. Everything in it is editable. Rewrite any section, add new ones, or remove what does not apply. Most people find they change less than they expected.