A ready-to-use marketing RFP template with 9 sections covering company overview, scope, objectives, budget, timeline, and evaluation criteria. Built for marketing leaders who are tired of receiving generic agency pitches.
Last updated: March 2026 · 10 min read
A Request for Proposal is the document that sets the terms of the relationship before the relationship starts.
Marketing leaders, procurement teams, and founders making agency hiring decisions for their brand.
You’re hiring an agency for SEO, paid media, content, or integrated digital marketing. This template gives you a professional document that filters for quality partners and weeds out generic pitches.
You don’t have a marketing team yet and need to hire your first agency. This template ensures you ask the right questions and evaluate proposals on substance, not salesmanship.
You’re managing the vendor selection process for the marketing department. This template standardizes submissions so you can compare agencies on equal terms with a structured scoring system.
9 sections, each designed to extract specific information from agencies.
| Section | Purpose | Key Elements |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Company Overview | Give agencies context about your business | Industry, revenue range, target audience, current marketing setup, competitive landscape |
| 2. Project Scope | Define what you’re hiring for | Channels in scope, deliverables expected, what’s out of scope, geographic focus |
| 3. Objectives and KPIs | Set measurable success criteria | Primary goals, target KPIs with baselines, reporting cadence, attribution model |
| 4. Budget Parameters | Anchor pricing expectations | Monthly retainer range, media spend range, one-time setup fees, payment terms |
| 5. Timeline | Set clear dates for the selection process and engagement | RFP deadline, shortlist date, pitch dates, decision date, expected start date |
| 6. Evaluation Criteria | Tell agencies how you’ll score them | Weighted criteria (experience 25%, methodology 20%, team 15%, pricing 15%, references 15%, culture fit 10%) |
| 7. Submission Requirements | Standardize what you receive | Format, page limits, required sections, case study requirements, pricing format |
| 8. Questions for Vendors | Probe for specific answers | 15 mandatory questions covering process, team, tools, reporting, and results |
| 9. Terms and Conditions | Set commercial expectations | NDA requirements, IP ownership, contract term, exit clause, data ownership |
“We respond to RFPs regularly. The ones that get our best proposals are the ones that tell us their actual business problem, not the ones that list 47 deliverables. A great RFP says ‘here’s where we are, here’s where we want to be, show us how you’d get us there.’ That’s what this template is designed to do.”
Hardik Shah, Founder of ScaleGrowth.Digital
| Criterion | Weight | What to Look For |
|---|---|---|
| Relevant Experience | 25% | Industry-specific case studies, understanding of your market, client tenure |
| Methodology & Approach | 20% | Structured process, clear deliverables per phase, rationale for strategy choices |
| Team Quality | 15% | Named team members, experience levels, account load per person |
| Pricing & Value | 15% | Transparency, scope-to-price alignment, no hidden costs, clear payment terms |
| References & Reputation | 15% | Verifiable references, average client tenure, Clutch/G2 ratings, industry recognition |
| Cultural Fit | 10% | Communication style, working rhythm, willingness to integrate with your team |
Score each criterion on a 1-5 scale. Multiply by weight. The agency with the highest weighted total is your frontrunner, but don’t skip reference checks even if they scored the highest on paper.
A 10-criteria scoring rubric for the evaluation stage. Use this after you’ve received proposals and need to score them objectively. Read Guide →
Once you’ve selected and hired an agency, use this monthly scorecard to track their performance against the KPIs you set in the RFP. Get Scorecard →
Before writing the RFP, get your own strategy clear. This template helps you define goals, channels, and budgets internally. Get Template →
Editable document format. Customize for your scope and send to agencies. Download Free Template →
Spreadsheet format. No spam. Instant access.
A marketing RFP should be 5-10 pages. Shorter than 5 pages and you’re not providing enough context for agencies to respond meaningfully. Longer than 10 pages and you’re over-specifying, which discourages top agencies from responding. The best RFPs are concise on format but specific on objectives and evaluation criteria.
Yes. Including a budget range (not an exact number) filters out agencies priced above or below your range and forces agencies within range to compete on value. Without a budget range, you’ll receive proposals spanning wildly different price points, making comparison difficult. Share a range like Rs 1,50,000-3,00,000 per month.
Send your RFP to 4-6 agencies. Fewer than 4 gives you insufficient comparison data. More than 6 creates an evaluation burden that slows down the decision and fatigues your team. Pre-qualify agencies through brief discovery calls before sending the RFP to ensure every recipient is a realistic candidate.
An RFI (Request for Information) is a preliminary document used to gather basic information about agency capabilities and pricing ranges. An RFP is a detailed document that requests a specific proposal with scope, pricing, team, and methodology. Use an RFI when you’re building your initial shortlist, and an RFP when you’re ready to compare finalists.
Give agencies 10-15 business days (2-3 weeks) to respond. This allows time for their senior team to review your site, research your competitive set, and write a thoughtful proposal. Less than one week signals that you’re either in a rush or not valuing the process. Very short timelines often result in generic, templated responses.
ScaleGrowth.Digital responds to RFPs with full transparency: named team, documented methodology, verifiable case studies, and no surprises. Send Us Your RFP →