Public Relations, Marketing, Social Media & Branding Request for Proposal Listings — Updated Daily
Everything-PR publishes new PR, marketing, social media, and communications RFPs daily — sourced from corporations, government agencies, nonprofits, universities, and economic development organizations across the United States. Each listing includes scope, deadline, and submission details. Agencies use the RFP feed as a structured business development pipeline. Brands and procurement teams can submit RFPs for free at info@everything-pr.com. Agencies looking to systematically convert RFP coverage into pipeline should also read why RFP newsletters are the smart agency’s secret weapon.
What is a PR RFP? A PR RFP (request for proposals) is a formal solicitation issued by an organization seeking to hire a public relations, marketing, or communications agency. RFPs include scope of work, evaluation criteria, budget parameters, submission requirements, and a deadline.
How often are new RFPs published on Everything-PR? New RFPs are added daily, sourced from public procurement portals, direct submissions, and partner organizations. The full RFP feed is updated continuously.
How do I submit an RFP to Everything-PR? Send your RFP toinfo@everything-pr.com with scope, deadline, budget range (if disclosed), and submission instructions. There is no charge to publish an RFP. Listings are typically live within one business day.
Are RFPs on Everything-PR free to access? Yes. RFP listings are free to read for any agency, individual, or organization. There is no paywall, registration, or subscription required.
How should a PR agency respond to an RFP? Lead with relevant case studies, name the senior people who will actually run the account, demonstrate category-specific expertise, address evaluation criteria directly, and submit on time. Generic capabilities decks lose to focused, specific proposals every time.
What is a typical RFP timeline? Most PR RFPs run 3 to 8 weeks from issue date to selection: 2–4 weeks for written response, 1–2 weeks for shortlisting, 1–2 weeks for finals presentations, then contracting. Federal and state government RFPs typically run longer.
How do I find PR RFPs that match my agency’s specialties? Subscribe tothe Everything-PR RFP feed and filter by industry vertical and scope. Consistent monitoring is the difference between agencies that win RFPs and agencies that don’t see them in time.