---
name: collaboration-proposal-writer
description: "Writes a structured proposal for a co-production, editorial partnership, or cross-platform collaboration between two or more media organisations, clearly articulating the mutual benefit and division of responsibilities."
status: stable
category: media-business
subcategory: pitching
version: 1.0
eval_score: 4.39
tags: [business, collaboration, partnerships, proposals, co-production, cross-platform]
---
# Collaboration Proposal Writer

## What This Skill Does
Writes a structured proposal for a co-production, editorial partnership, or cross-platform collaboration between two or more media organisations, clearly articulating the mutual benefit and division of responsibilities.

## When To Use This Skill
- You want to propose a co-production with another production company, newsroom, or channel
- You are pitching a cross-platform partnership (e.g., a podcast-and-video collaboration, or a print-and-documentary tie-in)
- You need to formalise an informal collaboration discussion into a document that decision-makers can review
- You want to approach a potential partner with a clear, professional proposal before the first meeting

## What You Need To Provide
**Required:**
- Your organisation's name and what you do (one sentence)
- The proposed partner's name and what they do (one sentence)
- The collaboration concept (what you would make together)
- What each side brings to the table (audience, expertise, funding, distribution, content library, etc.)

**Optional:**
- The specific format and scope (number of episodes, articles, duration, platform)
- Revenue or cost-sharing model (if you have a preference)
- Timeline or key milestones
- Any existing relationship with the proposed partner (cold approach, met at a conference, previous informal discussions)
- A specific problem this collaboration solves that neither party can solve alone

## How the Assistant Approaches This
1. **Opens with the opportunity, not the logistics.** The first paragraph frames why this collaboration makes strategic sense — the audience gap it fills, the market timing, or the editorial angle that requires both partners' strengths. Decision-makers need a reason to keep reading before they see a project plan.

2. **Articulates mutual benefit with specificity.** the assistant avoids vague "synergy" language. Instead, it names exactly what each partner gains: audience reach into a new demographic, access to a content library, production capacity, editorial credibility in a specific domain, or distribution on a platform they do not currently occupy.

3. **Proposes a clear structure.** The body of the proposal outlines the collaboration format, each party's role and responsibilities, and a suggested timeline. This demonstrates professionalism and makes the proposal actionable — the partner can respond to specific elements rather than to an abstract idea.

4. **Addresses the practical questions early.** How will editorial control be shared? Who owns the final content? What are the cost and revenue arrangements? The assistant raises these questions directly — either proposing terms or flagging them as discussion points — because experienced partners know that unaddressed practicalities kill collaborations.

5. **Closes with a specific next step.** The proposal ends with one concrete action: a meeting date suggestion, a call to discuss terms, or a request to share the document with the partner's editorial or business team. No open-ended "let us know your thoughts."

## Output Format
500–700 words. Professional document format with a clear title (e.g., "Collaboration Proposal: [Your Organisation] + [Partner Organisation]"). Four to six sections: Opportunity, Concept, What Each Partner Brings, Proposed Structure, Practical Considerations, Next Steps. Tone: professional, direct, collegial — not salesy. Short paragraphs. Can be sent as a PDF attachment or pasted into an email.

## Quality Criteria
- [ ] Opening paragraph frames the strategic opportunity — not the logistics
- [ ] Mutual benefit is specific and concrete for both parties — not generic "synergy"
- [ ] Each partner's role and contribution is clearly defined
- [ ] Practical questions (editorial control, ownership, costs) are addressed or flagged
- [ ] Tone is collegial and professional — not subordinate or overselling
- [ ] Closes with one specific, actionable next step
- [ ] A decision-maker at the partner organisation could evaluate this proposal without needing a follow-up call for basic information

## Example

### Input
**Your organisation:** Coastal Media — a mid-sized podcast production company specialising in environmental and science storytelling. Audience: 180,000 monthly listeners across four active shows.

**Proposed partner:** Horizon Digital News — an online-first news outlet covering climate, energy, and sustainability policy. Audience: 2.1 million monthly unique visitors, strong newsletter (340,000 subscribers).

**Collaboration concept:** A co-produced 8-episode podcast series investigating the real-world outcomes of carbon offset projects — combining Coastal Media's audio storytelling with Horizon's investigative reporting and data journalism.

**What each side brings:** Coastal Media brings audio production expertise, an established podcast audience, and distribution across major podcast platforms. Horizon brings investigative journalism capacity, a data team, access to policy sources, and a large newsletter audience for promotion.

**Existing relationship:** The two organisations have no formal relationship but share several freelance contributors.

**Problem this solves:** Coastal Media lacks investigative journalism capacity for a project of this scale. Horizon has been exploring podcast as a format but does not have in-house audio production.

### Output

**Collaboration Proposal: Coastal Media + Horizon Digital News**
*A co-produced investigative podcast series on carbon offset accountability*

---

**The Opportunity**

Carbon offset markets have grown into a multi-billion-dollar industry, yet public understanding of whether offsets deliver on their promises remains shallow. The handful of investigations published to date have been text-based and data-heavy — effective for policy audiences but difficult for a general audience to engage with. An investigative podcast series that combines rigorous data journalism with immersive audio storytelling would fill a gap that neither print investigation nor standard podcast formats can address alone.

**The Concept**

"Offset" is a proposed 8-episode investigative podcast series that traces specific carbon offset projects from purchase to claimed outcome — visiting the forests, farms, and facilities where offsets are supposedly delivered, and examining whether the carbon reductions are real, verifiable, and additional. Each episode follows one offset project, combining on-the-ground reporting with data analysis and expert interviews.

**What Each Partner Brings**

Coastal Media contributes full audio production — recording, editing, sound design, and mixing — as well as an established podcast audience of 180,000 monthly listeners and distribution across Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and all major platforms. Coastal's production team has delivered four seasons of long-form environmental audio and has the editorial voice and technical capacity to produce this series to broadcast standard.

Horizon Digital News contributes investigative journalism capacity — reporters with experience in climate accountability, a data journalism team capable of analysing offset registries and satellite imagery, and access to policy sources across government and industry. Horizon also brings a newsletter audience of 340,000 subscribers and 2.1 million monthly web visitors for cross-promotion.

**Proposed Structure**

- **Editorial lead:** Joint editorial oversight. Horizon leads on investigation, fact-checking, and data analysis. Coastal leads on narrative structure, audio production, and sound design.
- **Staffing:** Each organisation assigns one lead producer/reporter. Freelance contributors (several already work with both teams) support field reporting.
- **Timeline:** Research and pre-production (2 months), production (4 months), post-production and release (2 months). Total: 8 months from green light to first episode.
- **Release:** Weekly episodes over 8 weeks, with companion articles on Horizon's website publishing alongside each episode.

**Practical Considerations**

- **Ownership:** Joint ownership of the final audio content. Each organisation retains the right to use the material in its own channels (Horizon may adapt episodes into written features; Coastal may include clips in other programming). Terms to be formalised in a co-production agreement.
- **Costs:** Proposed 50/50 cost share. Estimated production budget to be discussed after an initial scoping meeting. Both organisations would seek sponsorship or grant funding jointly.
- **Branding:** Both organisations credited equally in all materials and in the podcast feed.

**Next Step**

We would welcome a 30-minute call with your editorial and partnerships team to discuss the concept and scope. We are available the week of April 7 and can share a more detailed production budget outline in advance. Please reply to this proposal or contact partnerships@coastalmedia.example.com to arrange a time.

## Known Limitations
- The assistant cannot assess the proposed partner's strategic priorities, internal politics, or willingness to collaborate. The proposal presents your strongest case, but the partner may have reasons to decline that are invisible from outside.
- Financial and legal terms in the proposal are starting positions for negotiation, not binding offers. Any co-production agreement should be reviewed by legal counsel on both sides before signing.
- The skill works best when you can articulate what both sides gain. If the collaboration is primarily beneficial to your organisation, the proposal will struggle to make a convincing mutual-benefit case — because there may not be one.

## Related Skills
- [cold-outreach-email-writer](../cold-outreach-email-writer/SKILL.md) — write the initial email that introduces this proposal
- [elevator-pitch-writer](../elevator-pitch-writer/SKILL.md) — distil the collaboration into a 60-second verbal pitch for a conference encounter
- [series-pitch-deck-writer](../series-pitch-deck-writer/SKILL.md) — build a full pitch deck for the co-produced project
