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Social Media Management Proposal Template (Free)

A proposal template for social media management services. Covers strategy, content calendar, and pricing.

Social media management proposals are notoriously painful to write. You're juggling platform specifics, pricing tiers, timeline expectations, and trying not to sound like every other agency pitching the same generic strategy deck.

This post gives you a complete, fill-in-the-blanks social media proposal template that works for Instagram, LinkedIn, TikTok, and X (Twitter). We'll walk through every section, show you what to include, give you exact language that converts, and explain why each part matters. By the end, you'll have a proposal framework you can customize in 30 minutes instead of spending all day writing from scratch.

Why Your Social Media Management Proposal Matters (More Than You Think)

Before we dig into the template, let's talk about why this document is so critical. A lot of agencies treat the proposal as a formality — just a contract with a few bullet points about what you'll do. That's a missed opportunity.

Your social media management proposal does three things:

1. It sets expectations. Clients come in with wildly different ideas about what "social media management" means. One thinks it's 5 TikTok videos per month. Another expects daily stories, community management, paid ads, and influencer partnerships. Your proposal kills that ambiguity upfront.

2. It justifies your price. You're not selling hours or blog posts. You're selling strategy, audience growth, engagement rates, and (ultimately) revenue. A good proposal breaks down exactly what they're paying for and why it costs what it costs.

3. It becomes your contract. Once they sign, your proposal is the document you refer back to when scope creep happens. "We agreed to 8 posts per month, remember?" beats endless email arguments about deliverables.

The best proposals aren't the prettiest. They're the ones that make clients feel like you've actually listened to their business and have a real plan to move the needle.


Why fill in brackets manually?

Wintura generates this template automatically — filled in with your client's real details, your pricing, and your brand. 5 minutes, not 5 hours.

Generate With AI Instead

The Complete Social Media Proposal Template

We'll break this into sections. Copy what works, customize what doesn't, and delete anything that doesn't fit your process.

1. Executive Summary (One Page, Maximum)

Start here. Don't bury the lede.

What to include:
  • Client name and project name
  • 2-3 sentence overview of the opportunity (what we're solving for)
  • High-level strategy (not tactics yet)
  • Investment amount and timeline
  • Next steps

Example language:
Project: Social Media Management for XYZ Fitness — Year 1 Growth Strategy

>

Opportunity: XYZ Fitness has strong in-studio performance (500+ members) but minimal social presence. Instagram has 180 followers with sporadic posting. LinkedIn is untouched. There's an immediate opportunity to convert existing members into advocates, attract new leads through user-generated content, and position the founder as a fitness thought leader.

>

Our Approach: We'll audit your current presence, develop a platform-specific strategy for Instagram and LinkedIn, create a 12-week content calendar, and manage daily community engagement. We'll also implement a paid social pilot (2 months) to test messaging and audience targeting.

>

Investment: $3,500/month (6-month commitment) | Timeline: Months 1-6

>

Next Step: We'll schedule a 30-minute strategy call to align on success metrics and kick off the social audit.

Notice: specific numbers, specific platforms, specific deliverables. Not "comprehensive social strategy."

2. Current State Audit

This is where you show the client you've actually done your homework. Don't just list metrics. Tell a story about what you found.

What to include for each platform:
  • Current follower count and growth trend (last 6 months)
  • Engagement rate (likes + comments / followers = %)
  • Content mix (% carousels, reels, stories, static posts)
  • Posting frequency
  • Audience demographics (if available)
  • Top 3 performing posts (and why they worked)
  • Top 3 gaps (missing platforms, inconsistent posting, weak CTAs, etc.)

Example:
Instagram Audit

>

Current Metrics:
- Followers: 340 (grew 12% last quarter)
- Engagement Rate: 2.1% (industry benchmark for fitness: 3.5-5%)
- Monthly Reach: ~4,200 impressions
- Best Performing Content: Before/after transformation posts (7.2% engagement) and member spotlights (6.4% engagement)

>

What's Working:
- Member testimonials drive consistent engagement
- Reels outperform static posts by 4x
- Stories with direct calls-to-action (book a class, DM for pricing) convert best

>

What's Missing:
- No consistent posting schedule (ranging from 2-11 days between posts)
- Limited use of hashtags on carousel posts
- No user-generated content strategy (members aren't tagging you)
- Zero engagement in community (comments aren't replied to within 24 hours)

This section does two things: it proves you're not a template agency, and it gives the client an "aha" moment about what's broken.

3. Platform Strategy (The Core of the Proposal)

This is where you explain what you'll do on each platform and why. Not all platforms are created equal. A startup selling B2B SaaS doesn't need TikTok. A fitness brand probably does.

Instagram Strategy
  • Goal: Grow followers from 340 to 800 (136% growth) in 6 months by establishing consistent posting, leveraging member stories, and testing paid partnership ads
  • Content Mix: 60% member stories and transformations | 25% educational fitness content (tips, form checks) | 15% promotional (class schedules, offers)
  • Posting Frequency: 5 posts per week + daily stories
  • Key Features: Carousel posts (long-form educational), Reels (weekly), Stories (daily community moments)
  • Engagement Approach: Reply to 100% of comments within 4 hours; DMing warm leads within 24 hours

LinkedIn Strategy
  • Goal: Establish founder as fitness industry thought leader; generate B2B inquiries (corporate wellness partnerships)
  • Content Mix: 50% original thought leadership posts | 30% company culture/member wins | 20% industry insights
  • Posting Frequency: 3 posts per week (Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday at 8am)
  • Key Features: Long-form posts (carousel PDFs), video Q&As, company updates
  • Engagement Approach: Founder spends 15 mins/day commenting on fitness industry posts; we handle all reply-to-comments

TikTok Strategy (Optional)
  • Goal: Test viral awareness channel; attract Gen Z audience segment
  • Content Mix: 40% trending audio + fitness hook | 30% behind-the-scenes (gym culture) | 30% educational quick tips
  • Posting Frequency: 3-4 videos per week
  • Success Metrics: 10k followers in 6 months (realistic for fitness niche); target 5%+ engagement rate

X (Twitter) Strategy
  • Goal: Join industry conversations, build authority, drive traffic to blog
  • Content Mix: 50% industry news/commentary | 30% fitness quick-takes | 20% re-sharing company content
  • Posting Frequency: 4-5 posts per week
  • Key Features: Thread posts (threads = 10+ retweets per post)
  • Engagement Approach: Active in fitness/wellness hashtags; we monitor and reply daily

The key here: platform selection should be strategic, not random. Not every brand needs every platform. Make the case for why you're recommending what you're recommending.

4. Content Pillars & Themes

Content pillars are the buckets that organize your ideas. They prevent your feed from looking scattered.

Example for fitness brand:
  • Pillar 1: Transformation Stories (member testimonials, progress photos, case studies)
  • Pillar 2: Education (form tips, nutrition advice, fitness myths debunked)
  • Pillar 3: Community (member spotlights, behind-the-scenes, gym culture)
  • Pillar 4: Promotions (new class schedules, membership offers, events)
  • Pillar 5: Founder Leadership (LinkedIn/X — fitness opinions, industry takes)

For each pillar, specify:

  • Which platforms it appears on
  • What % of your monthly content falls into this bucket
  • Example post ideas (give 3-5 specific examples)

This prevents the client from saying "Can you just do whatever?" and gives your team a framework to stay on-brand while staying efficient.

5. Content Calendar & Deliverables

Here's where you get specific about what they're actually getting every month.

Monthly Deliverables
  • 20 Instagram posts (5/week) + daily stories
  • 12 LinkedIn posts (3/week)
  • 12-16 TikTok videos (3-4/week) [if applicable]
  • 20 X posts (4-5/week) [if applicable]
  • Community management: reply to all comments/DMs within 24 hours
  • Monthly performance report (see Reporting section)

Content Calendar Workflow

1. We create a 12-week content calendar in Month 1 (shows themes, post types, posting dates)

2. By the 5th of each month, we deliver the next month's calendar for your review/approval

3. You have 3 business days to request changes; we finalize and begin publishing

4. All content uses your brand voice, colors, and logos; you approve final posts 48 hours before publishing

This removes ambiguity. The client knows exactly when to expect the calendar, how much revision time they have, and how publishing works.

6. Community Management & Audience Growth

Social media isn't just posting. It's showing up.

What's included:
  • Comment Moderation: Approving/responding to comments on all platforms within 4-24 hours
  • DM Management: Categorizing incoming messages (leads, questions, support requests) and flagging warm opportunities
  • Engagement Outreach: Commenting on and sharing posts from complementary brands (other fitness studios, nutrition brands, wellness influencers) to grow visibility
  • Monthly Growth Target: We'll target a 10-15% follower growth rate per month, accounting for Instagram's algorithm shifts

What we measure:
  • Response rate (% of comments/DMs replied to)
  • Engagement rate (% of followers interacting)
  • Follower growth (absolute and %)
  • Saved/shares per post (shows valuable content)

7. Paid Social & Performance Ads

This is optional, but most clients expect it. Be clear about what's included in your fee vs. what's additional spend.

Option A: Paid Social Included in Fee
"We'll manage a $1,000/month paid social budget to test messaging, audiences, and creatives. This is included in your monthly fee. We'll run campaigns on Instagram and Facebook targeting cold/warm audiences. You'll see a full breakdown in the monthly performance report."
Option B: Paid Social as Add-On
"Paid social is managed separately. You set a monthly budget ($500-$2,000 recommended for fitness studios), we manage the campaigns, and you only pay for actual ad spend (not our management fee). We charge a 20% management fee on top of ad spend."
In either case, specify:
  • Which platforms get paid budget
  • What we're testing (awareness, lead generation, conversions)
  • Expected ROAS based on industry benchmarks
  • Reporting frequency (weekly or monthly performance)

8. Reporting & Analytics

Every client wants to know: "Is this working?"

Monthly Report Includes:
  • Follower growth (absolute numbers and %)
  • Engagement metrics (reach, impressions, engagement rate)
  • Top 5 performing posts (likes, comments, saves, shares, click-throughs)
  • Audience demographics (new followers, location, interests)
  • Paid social performance (if applicable) — cost per result, ROAS, CTR
  • Competitor benchmarking (how you stack up vs. 3 similar fitness studios)
  • Recommendations for next month

Quarterly Business Review:

Once per quarter, we'll hop on a 45-minute call to review progress against initial goals, discuss what's working/what isn't, and adjust strategy if needed.

Be specific about delivery. "We send reports by the 5th of each month" beats "monthly reporting."

9. Community Management & Influencer Strategy (Optional)

Some clients want you to go further. Make this a clear add-on.

If Including:
  • Influencer Outreach: We identify 10-15 micro-influencers in your niche (10k-100k followers) who align with your values
  • Partnership Pitches: We write and send outreach emails proposing gifting opportunities, affiliate partnerships, or paid collaborations
  • Collaboration Management: We coordinate with influencers on content direction, deadlines, posting, and tagging
  • ROI Tracking: We track clicks, promo code usage, and new members from influencer partnerships

Cost: $800-1,500/month (add-on) or include in base fee if budget allows

How to Price This (A Quick Framework)

Pricing social media management varies wildly, but here's what we see working:

  • Basic (1 platform, no paid ads): $1,500-2,500/month
  • Standard (2-3 platforms, 1,000/month ad budget managed): $2,500-4,000/month
  • Premium (4 platforms, paid ads included, influencer outreach): $4,000-6,000+/month

Read our full guide on how to price social media services for more detail on value-based pricing and tiering options.

Filling In Your Own Template: Where to Customize

Use this structure as a starting point, but make it yours:

1. Audit Section: Actually run the audit. Use tools like Later, Buffer, or Sprout Social to pull real numbers. Generic audits scream "template agency."

2. Platform Selection: Not every client needs 4 platforms. If they're B2B with no Gen Z audience, skip TikTok. If they're not leadership-focused, skip LinkedIn. Be honest.

3. Content Mix %: These percentages should be based on what actually works for their industry. Fitness is heavy on UGC. SaaS is heavy on thought leadership. Adjust accordingly.

4. Reporting Metrics: Pick metrics that matter to the client's actual business. For an e-commerce brand, that's traffic and revenue. For a service business, it's leads. For a creator, it's followers and sponsorships. Don't report vanity metrics they don't care about.

5. Timelines: Some clients want 4-week turnaround on content calendar. Others want monthly. Some want daily publishing. Be explicit about your process.


Red Flags to Avoid in Your Proposal

  • Vague deliverables: "We'll manage your social media presence" — too broad. Say "20 Instagram posts/month + 50 comment responses/week."
  • No baseline metrics: Don't promise "increase engagement" without showing current engagement rate first.
  • Unrealistic timelines: If you're a 3-person shop, don't promise 24-hour response times on all platforms.
  • Missing exclusions: Be clear about what's NOT included. "We don't produce video content" or "Paid ads are billed separately" prevents future fights.
  • No success criteria: Define what "success" looks like. Growth % target? Engagement rate? Lead volume? Pick metrics that tie to their business goals.


Making Your Proposal Visually Compelling (Without Being Annoying)

Your proposal doesn't need to be 40 pages with 15 brand colors. But it should be easy to read and look intentional.

  • Use your brand colors (2-3 max) for headings and section dividers
  • Add actual screenshots of their current Instagram/LinkedIn feeds (shows you researched them)
  • Include 2-3 mock-ups of content calendars or post designs (shows you have a plan)
  • Use charts for metrics (current vs. projected follower growth, engagement rate vs. benchmarks)
  • Keep it to 8-12 pages max

Clients skim proposals. Make the important stuff pop.


How to Present This Proposal

Email + call beats email-only. Here's the flow:

1. Email: Send the proposal with a short note: "Here's the social strategy we discussed. Jump to page 3 for deliverables and pricing. Happy to answer any questions — let's jump on a quick call Thursday?"

2. Call: Walk through it. Spend time on the audit (prove you listened) and the strategy (prove you have a plan).

Why fill in brackets manually?

Wintura generates this template automatically — filled in with your client's real details, your pricing, and your brand. 5 minutes, not 5 hours.

Generate With AI Instead

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Why fill in brackets manually?

Wintura generates this template automatically — filled in with your client's real details, your pricing, and your brand. 5 minutes, not 5 hours.

Generate With AI Instead