Pricing & Proposals
Proposals get written on Sunday. A lead comes in warm on Wednesday, you mean to send something Thursday, and by the time the document is assembled — scope rewritten, timeline guessed, terms copied from the last one and half-updated — it is the weekend and the lead has cooled. The document itself is not hard. It is just three hours of unpaid work that always collides with paid work.
Skynet compresses the assembly. It reads the discovery call and drafts the proposal against your template, and because it holds your past projects in memory, it can tell you what a comparable job actually took versus what you quoted. That is the number that matters and the one nobody tracks. What you charge stays your decision — the agent’s job is to make sure the estimate is anchored in your real history rather than optimism.
How it works
Learn your template and your history
Connect your proposal template and your past projects — what was quoted, what was scoped, what it actually took. Skynet holds both, so drafts come out in your format and your estimates come from your data.
Draft from the discovery call
Feed it the call transcript and notes. It fills in scope, deliverables, timeline, and terms, and marks anything the conversation did not cover rather than inventing it.
Anchor the estimate in reality
For each line, the agent surfaces what similar past work took in hours. Where you overran before, you see it. The pricing call is yours; the amnesia is gone.
Send it the same day
You edit the draft, set the number, and send. What used to be a Sunday is a Wednesday afternoon, which is usually the difference between winning the project and being the second reply.
Build it from a prompt
Give it the call and your history, and ask for a draft.
You send proposals faster and price them with your own track record in front of you. The judgment about what this client is worth and what you want to take on is still entirely yours — Skynet just removes the three hours between deciding and sending.