Generic templates look generic. Clients notice. Upload your logo, set your colours, pick your fonts — and every proposal you send looks like an extension of your brand, not a SaaS product.
First impressions in the inbox
Most freelancers send proposals that look like they were made in Google Docs with the default font. Which is fine, until it isn’t. A client comparing three proposals will notice which one looks like it came from a real studio.
That’s not about being flashy. It’s about looking like you take your own work seriously.
Set it up once
Your brand settings live in your account. Upload your logo, configure your colours and fonts, save a preset. Every new proposal inherits those settings automatically.
For repeat clients or agency work where you’re presenting under a client’s brand, the per-proposal override means you’re never stuck with your own palette when you need theirs.
FAQs
Custom font upload is available on the Pro plan. Standard plan users have access to the full Google Fonts library.
Yes. Set your global brand in settings, then override any element on individual proposals without affecting your defaults.
PNG, JPG, and SVG. SVG is recommended for the sharpest output across all screen sizes.
Yes. When a client accepts and the PDF is generated, it uses the same styling as the online version. What they signed is what they get.
Yes. Name them, save them, apply them. Useful if you work across multiple brands or do a lot of co-branded proposals.