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The 3 Why Us Anchors

Closing argument for every proposal — memorize these three

Version 1 · June 29, 2026 positioningpitch
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The 3 "Why Us" Anchors

Parent: Pitch Playbooks

The three sentences that go on every proposal's "Why Us" page. Memorize them.

01. Above & Beyond

We care about the long-term health of this flow more than the contract. The acceptance-criteria checklist is the floor — backtesting past the bar, edge cases nobody asked about, and monitoring that catches problems before you do all come standard. The job isn't "works on demo day" — it's "still works in two years."

The hook: flip the contract from "deliverable" to "long-term outcome." Most vendors care about hitting the contract; we care about the system actually working in production a year out.

02. Nine Years. Four in Construction.

We've shipped automations others said couldn't be done — the messy ones with five legacy systems, fuzzy PDF data, and stakeholders who couldn't agree on what the output should look like. That's not the exception. That's most of the work.

The hook: every construction prospect has been burned by a vendor who said "this should be straightforward" and then disappeared into a 6-month rabbit hole. This anchor says: messy is normal, we've done it, we deliver anyway.

03. You're Not Handed Off

Working systems, not reports. Fixed price, no scope creep, no monthly SaaS. The senior engineer on this proposal is the one writing the code and supporting it after go-live — no offshore team, no junior dev cycle.

The hook: the agency model is dead to construction owners — they've all been handed off to a junior dev and watched the project die. The "same person who pitched it builds it" pitch lands harder than any technical credential.

How to use these in a pitch

These three are the closing argument — drop them at the end of the proposal walkthrough, right before the price.

Order matters:

  1. Above & Beyond (sets expectations beyond the contract)
  2. Nine Years in Construction (proves credibility for the hard cases)
  3. You're Not Handed Off (eliminates the agency-failure fear)

Then transition: "Here's the price."

What never goes on the Why Us page


Last updated: 2026-05-24

History

  1. v1
    claude · Jun 29