If you run a business, you already know the moment a prospect says “Can you send a quote?” can make or break a deal. A clear, consistent quote template turns that shaky moment into a confident one. Instead of hunting through old files, you start from a structure that already includes your logo, terms, line items, taxes, and discounts. You simply plug in the details.
Templates protect your margins because they force you to think through everything you should bill for—time, materials, fees—every single time. They also keep your brand steady: same look, same language, same professionalism across every quote, whether it’s for a tiny one-off job or a six-figure project.
But here’s where it gets interesting: once your quote template lives in Google Sheets or Excel, an AI computer agent can take over the grunt work. Instead of manually copying prices, updating totals, or rewriting scopes, you can have the agent pull data from your CRM, apply your pricing rules, fill in the template, and even log the quote status. Delegating this to an AI agent means faster turnaround, fewer fat-finger errors, and more time for actual selling instead of spreadsheet shuffling.
If you sell services or projects, quotes are your currency. But they’re also time thieves. One rep copies an old spreadsheet. Another reinvents columns from scratch. Someone forgets tax. Someone else mis-types a discount.
Multiply that across a team and suddenly “sending a quick quote” eats hours you should be spending closing deals.
A better pattern is simple: one solid quote template in Google Sheets or Excel, then layers of automation on top — all the way up to an AI agent that can do the grunt work for you.
Below are the top ways to build, streamline, and finally automate quote templates.
This is where most small teams start.
Step-by-step:
=C10*D10*(1-E10) for a discounted line item.Pros:
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Excel shines when your pricing logic gets more complex.
Step-by-step:
Service_Table, Client_Name) for clarity.Pros:
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Before bringing in an AI agent, you can do a surprising amount with built-in tools.
A. Use Forms to Feed Your Template
B. Centralize Your Price Book
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Now imagine this workflow instead:
That’s the shift from "templates" to "hands-off quoting".
Because Simular’s desktop agents can operate across your whole computer, they can:
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Done well, quote templates stop being another chore on your to-do list. They become a reliable system your AI agent runs for you, while you focus on building relationships and closing better deals.
Start a new Sheet and reserve the top rows for your company name, logo (Insert > Image), contact info, quote number, date, and validity. Below that, add a table with columns for Description, Qty, Unit Price, Discount, and Line Total. Use formulas like =B4*C4 to calculate line totals and SUM ranges for subtotals and grand total. Finally, add a terms section and protect formula cells so they aren’t accidentally edited.
First, clean your Excel file: separate input cells (client, items) from formulas (totals, tax). Use cell shading or borders to highlight editable fields. Add Data Validation lists for repeatable items like services or tax rates. Then go to File > Save As and choose Excel Template (.xltx). Store it in a shared folder. Now, every new quote starts from that master: open the template, fill in client data, Save As a new file, and your structure stays consistent.
Create one dedicated price book in Google Sheets or Excel with columns for item code, description, standard rate, and optional discount tiers. In your quote template, reference this price book with lookup formulas (VLOOKUP or XLOOKUP) based on item code or name. Train your team to only edit the price book, never hard-code prices in the template. Review the price book monthly to update costs and margins so every new quote automatically reflects the latest pricing.
Start by defining strict rules for the AI agent: which quote template it may use, what discount ranges are allowed, and which approvals are required above certain totals. Let the agent gather client data, open your Google Sheets or Excel template, and fill in fields automatically. Keep a human in the loop at first: the agent drafts the quote, you review and send. Monitor logs of each run to verify it follows your pricing policy, then gradually expand its autonomy.
Add a simple "Status" column and "Last Updated" column to a central quotes tracker sheet. Each time you create a quote from your template, log a new row with client, amount, date, and status (e.g. Sent, Negotiating, Won, Lost). Use filters or pivot tables to see pipeline value by stage. For extra automation, let an AI agent update this sheet whenever it prepares a quote, sends a follow-up email, or detects a signed acceptance in your inbox, so your pipeline stays current automatically.