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SF330 Government Proposal Form made available by Wordsworth in Microsoft Word
April 3, 2004
Architectural and engineering firms will soon have to start using the new Standard Form 330 (SF330), instead of the 254/255 forms, for federal proposals. On January 12, 2004, the SF330 form became effective; however, the government recently delayed mandatory use until June 8.
Wordsworth Writing, Editing, and Document Formatting Services announced today that they are offering the SF330 template in Microsoft Word and WordPerfect for $59 for continuous, unlimited use by one company (and $249 for all branch offices of the same company). The government is providing the form in a PDF format.
“We have created the SF330 form in an easy-to-use format, yet it looks exactly like the government’s PDF,” said Lori Jo Oswald, Ph.D., Wordsworth’s owner and the form’s creator. “We matched headers, footers, borders, fonts, text content, and styles. All you have to do is start typing.” Dr. Oswald also provides the SF330 resume and project template pages (Sections E and F of the SF330) as separate files free to purchasers of the form.
The SF330 form can be purchased online at Wordsworth’s Web site; the form is then immediately e-mailed to purchasers. Dr. Oswald will also transfer information from a firm’s 254/255 forms to the new SF330 form; information on this service is also at Wordsworth’s Web site. “So far, everyone has been pleased with our form. We do offer a money-back guarantee on all our forms and reports and templates, but no one has asked for his or her money back,” Dr. Oswald said. Dr. Oswald can be reached by e-mail at loswald@wordsworthwriting.net or by phone at 907-745-5674.
Wordsworth, founded in 1984, offers technical writing, editing, and document formatting services for companies and sells style guides, proposal and report templates, employee and health and safety manuals, and other documents at its Web site: www.wordsworthwriting.net. “I am especially proud of our style guide,” said Dr. Oswald. “It is about 90 pages in length and is designed specifically for engineering, architectural, and surveying firms.” Dr. Oswald, who has a Ph.D. in English, included topics that address common errors in style and mechanics that she has seen in over 18 years as a technical editor.
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