Perception is reality in the eyes of the client. Facts don't always seem to be relevant.
Maybe you could look at building in the development / planning costs right into the implementation costs.
What's important for the client to understand is value. I don't want to assume anything, but at the end of all analysis / design, I provide a written feature/tech spec that they agree and sign off on. It might be a simple email, or a document.
We are hired to generate more value than for which we are paid. If we do it, we get more work. If we don't, we move on.
It helps to have clients learn to look at a project in terms of not what it costs, but what it will make them. Some clients focus on saving pennies instead of making dollars. Software is almost always better made with a process than without one. Maybe he would like to do an agile methodology and pay for your time straight to get what he wants, how he wants it?
Focusing every word you write in terms of:
- their needs,
- what benefits they will have from fixing that need,
- how your solution to delivers that need
is paramount. It's hard to do that literally for each sentence. I usually start my proposals out with the value of my processes and tools.
The disconnect might be happening because your client is either too busy, or not interested in understanding the details. You have to fill the gap and make them comfortable leaving it with you and that you are making decisions in their best interest -- and not your own.
Building trust takes time and best done as mentioned in one of the posts above - short victories, often towards the final goal. They see results as progress and don't worry about the activity (development/planning) time as much.
Working without a plan is like building a house without a blueprint and only a few rough sketches. How much would you have to re-do things during the construction of such a home?
It is impossible to give a client the best value, without a plan that you create and manage for them, simply doing the work can cost two to three times without a plan. In such a case you can tell them that they can hire you hourly and you'll do whatever, forever.
In seeing your proposal above it might have too much information. Good in some ways, and maybe not since it's causing
I stick to six steps that I cover. The simpler the project is, I just combine them. The more details I have to break out, I will write more in each area. Each area requires a sign off before moving to the next. It's a variant of the waterfall software process. I track each as Being "To Start", "In Progress", or "Completed".
I have modified my project management software (FogBugz) to handle it and it works well. I can run a report and see where any request is at in the following phase.
1) Analysis - "What do we want to do" Both sides must agree on the scope and final results and how they will be measured.
2) Design - "How are we going to do it"
3) Plan - "Who/what will we need to lineup/prepare and when will we do this"
4) Implement - "Do it"
5) Test - "Break it and fix it"
6) Launch - "Soft + Hard Launch"
7) Support - "Training/Documentation, as required"
It's weird. I have done 20-30 page proposals and not gotten the project. I have boiled the same down to 5-7 pages and for a larger project and gotten the work. What I have taken from that is I"m being paid to handle the details. They just want to know where we're at.
I have noticed is each client needs to be communicated with clearly, but how each may need their information may be a tiny bit different.
Maybe get a list of your clients exact concerns and a few examples. If his perception is that "managing" is causing delays in a deliverable, that can be addressed. It would be best not to try and answer him on them right away, just say you will take what he says and analyze what he's saying to see what might be possible.