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7
tips to write more effective reports
By Suzan St Maur
Contributing writer, WordBiz Report
There is one key
difference between reports and most other forms of business writing, and we
get a hint of that in the word "report." Whereas with many other forms
of written communications you can be a little creative and put your own slant
on your words, in a report you must not. Not in theory, anyway.
Just
the report, please
In a report, you're supposed to report - not embellish, embroider, influence,
etc. Just the facts and nothing but the facts.
This does not,
however, mean that reports need to be dull and boring. It does, however, mean
that you can't make the content more interesting than it really is. Impossible?
No, it just takes some good organization and clear writing.
Before we go any
further, there are numerous books and training courses on the market that teach
you the formalities and practicalities of report writing. Some are more long-winded
than others. Most of them are good.
Here in this article
I can't do what other writers do in a book, so if you need to write reports
a lot, I recommend that you buy one or two of the most popular books and study
them. What I'm doing here then, is to highlight the points I think are most
important to help you make your reports more readable, and the information in
them come across more vividly.
If you work in
a larger organization, there will probably be set formats for reports, at least
for the internal variety. Whether you like them or not you're normally obliged
to stick to them. However the way you roll out and write your content is still
up to you.
So
what are the key points to focus on?
1. Write for
your reader
Don't allow yourself
to fall into "businessese" jargon and phrasing no matter how much
you or other people may feel it's more appropriate. It isn't. Use language and
tone of voice that your key readers will feel comfortable with. If you don't
know what they feel comfortable with, find out. It's well worth taking the trouble,
because it will make the report much more enjoyable for them to read - a good
reflection on you.
If your report
is to be read by a wide variety of different audiences, focus your language
on the most important groups. Ensure that less topic-literate readers are catered
for by using discreet explanations of technical terms or perhaps a short glossary
of terms as an appendix within the report.
2. Organize
your information sensibly
Start by writing
yourself out a list of headings which start at the beginning and finish with
the conclusions of your information. If you must include a lot of background
information before you get into the "meat" of the information, section
it off clearly with headings that say that it's background ("Research Project
Objectives," "Research Methods Used To Collate Information,"
"Personnel Involved In Questionnaire," etc.) so those who know it
all already can skip straight to the important stuff.
Make sure your
headings "tell the story" so someone glancing through those alone
will get the basic messages. (You'll find that busy executives will thank you
for doing this, especially when they have 16 other, similar reports to read
in a crowded commuter train on the way into a meeting to discuss all of them.)
Then fill in the details under each heading as concisely as you can.
3. Use an "executive
summary" to tell it in a nutshell
Depending on the
nature of your report you may be expected to include an executive summary, or
at least an introduction that captures the key points of your information. The
objective of this is to give the reader the key issues as quickly as possible.
Write this after you've done the body of the report, not before. Use your list
of headings as a guide.
Keep strictly to
the facts - this is still part of the report, not your interpretation of it.
Strip each sentence down to bare bones with minimal adjectives and adverbs.
Use short words and sentences. Don't just get to the point - start with it and
stick to it.
4. If your interpretation
is called for, keep it separate
If part of your
remit is to comment on the report and/or its conclusions, keep this separate
from the main body of information. (Blocked off in a box or under a clearly
separated heading will do.)
Naturally as you're
professional you will be as objective as possible. But if you do feel strongly
one way or another, ensure that your argument is put as reasonably as possible
without going on for pages and pages. Remember, brief is beautiful, although
it's harder to write briefly (and include all the important points) than it
is to produce words in abundance.
5. Don't get
carried away with illustrations
Graphs and charts
are great to illustrate important issues and like the man said, "a picture
is worth a thousand words." However ensure that those you use are of a
level of complexity that will be understood by the least topic-literate of your
readers. There's nothing more irritating than a graph that takes you 20 minutes
to decipher. It's not so much a case that readers are too stupid to understand
a complex graph, as it is that they don't want to spend too much time working
it out. The easier/quicker you make it for readers to understand and assimilate
your information, the more successful your report.
Try, also, to keep
graphs and charts physically adjacent to the text that talks about the same
thing. There's nothing more irritating for the reader if they have to keep flipping
from front to back of a document. (When in doubt, think of someone reading your
report on that crowded commuter train.)
6. Cut the clutter
Still on that topic,
try to avoid including too many diverse elements in your report, no matter how
long and involved it is. If you do need to include appendices and various bits
of background material, research statistics, etc., make sure they're neatly
labeled and contained at the back of your document.
As I suggested
earlier, don't ask readers to skip back and forth, directing them with asterisks
and other reference directing symbols. If you're writing a medical report or
paper then you're obliged to include these when quoting references from other
papers, but please keep even these to a minimum. They're very distracting and
can break your reader's concentration.
7. Take some
trouble to make it look nice
I know you shouldn't
judge a book by its cover, but people do. Like it or not. According to UK Image
consultant Tessa S, when you walk into a meeting, 55% of your first impression
of someone is reflected exclusively in the way you're dressed. Documents fall
into the same hole. So how your document looks goes a long way to creating the
right impression of your work, and of you.
Obviously if a
report is due to go outside your organization and particularly to clients or
customers, you will be careful to ensure it's polished and clearly branded with
your corporate identity and all that. However, how an internal report looks
is important, too, although your Head of Finance might have apoplexy if you
bind it in expensive glossy card. Be sensible with the internal variety - neat,
understated, groomed looks don't have to cost much but they "say"
a lot about the value of your report (and you.)
Bonus Tip: A
minute on minutes
I think minute-taking
is a horrible job, having done so for 6 years while on a charity fundraising
committee. And being useless at handwriting (thanks to decades of computers
and typewriters) never mind shorthand (was thrown out of secretarial school
after 3 weeks) I struggled for months to scribble everything down to précis
later, until I realized that my brain was a far more efficient filter of information.
At the end of each
agenda item, I asked myself the classic reporter questions of "who, what,
where, when, why, how and how much." All I had to do was jot down a few
words and when I got home to my trusty PC, I could expand those into realistic
summaries of what went on.
As much of the
dialogue in meetings is either unnecessary, repetitive, or both, simply use
your brain as a filter. That's what it's trained to do for you in your day-to-day
life, so it works for meetings too. One word of warning though; don't wait too
long before your work up your minutes. Another trick the brain does is to forget
after a few hours or a day or so at most...
This article is
reprinted with permission. It originally appeared in UK copywriter Suzan
St Maur's business writing tips eZine, TIPZ from SUZE. To subscribe
go to www.suzanstmaur.com
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