What’s the Difference? Project Plan vs. Project Proposal

Project plans and project proposals both lay out a road map for how the project will be run and what the results will be. The two phrases are often used interchangeably, and some organizations are indeed the same document. However, there are some key differences that are important to keep in mind.

Project Plan: a document outlining how a project will be implemented.

Project Proposal: a document used to request funding to implement a project.

Spot the differences? Let’s go through how these details matter in practice.

Audience

One big difference between plan and a proposal is the people who read them. Internal project implementors or officers read project plans. External donors or evaluators read project proposals. As in all writing, it is important to take your audience into consideration in word choice and topics covered. Abbreviations commonly used within your organization may be fine for the plan, but donors will not know what you are talking about. Additionally, donors may not have as clear an understanding of local issues like you do, so make sure to provide adequate project background in the proposal.

Purpose

Project officers need the project plan to inform their actions in implementing the project. Donors need a proposal to make a funding decision. This means that the readers are looking for different pieces of information. Project officers will want to look for technical details like deadlines, deliverables, resources, etc. Evaluators will need some of this information as well, but only to evaluate the cohesiveness of the plan, not to act on it. Evaluators also ask another question which implementors typically do not: why support this project instead of another? For this, proposals also need to provide a broader rationale for their project and why it is so important.

Tone

The tone, which sets the mood or attitude of the writing, in both plans and proposals are often very formal. Plans are typically formal documents with an impersonal tone that focuses on the technical details. Proposals, by contrast, still should be formal but also can experiment with more personal tones. Proposals convince donors to take action. To accomplish this, they can be written as an emotional appeal, a factual argument, an optimistic vision for the future, a dire warning of the current situation, etc.

Message

A good project plan explains how the project will be implemented. A good project proposal explains why the project will be implemented. The difference here is very slight, but this shift in tone and writing style has a big impact on applications. Understanding this difference and implementing it will improve both your plans and proposals.

Also, read this article from Tople that explores the bane of many a project manager’s existences: scope creep


About the author

Alta Alonzi

Alta Alonzi is a writer and researcher focusing on international development funding and grassroots NGOs. She works with the fundraising consulting company Philantropia conducting research for clients ranging from small NGOs to UN organizations. She also works closely with FundsforNGOs running training webinars, contributing resource guides, and updating the Premium donor database.

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Niru aryal
Niru aryal
6 years ago

Nicely explained

Claudine
Claudine
6 years ago

I loved the way you explained the differences of project work plan and project proposal based on the audience, message , tone and purpose. I wish you may also tell the link between both.

Eva Wieners
Editor
6 years ago
Reply to  Claudine

Hi Claudine,

thank you for your comment. We will keep this in mind for a future article!

Markos Alemu
Markos Alemu
1 year ago
Reply to  Claudine

Project proposal is broad in scope and include the project/business plan

Getasew
Getasew
5 years ago

Wow thank you you use simple and clear

christine
christine
4 years ago

Good job.I understand now clearly.thanks

christine
christine
4 years ago

yes

Bert Maxis
Bert Maxis
2 years ago

Simple and clear

Priti Thapa
Admin
2 years ago
Reply to  Bert Maxis

Dear Bert:
I am glad you found this article helpful!

Jane
Jane
2 years ago

Thank you! for your explanation of the difference between project proposal and project plan

Proposals forNGOs
Admin
2 years ago
Reply to  Jane

Dear Jane: I am glad you found this article helpful!

Eric
Eric
1 year ago

So if I work in the maintenance department with it’s own director. Yet see an area that is being neglected that I feel I could be a good fit for and bring a definite improvement and lasting value to my company. What would be the best way to put it out there? And maybe help some of the upper level decision makers see that by creating this position will in the long run be more beneficial for the company. Even if it might take a small investment to get it rolling?

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