Chapter 9 Business Communication
transmittal message
message that transmits the report to the reader, in formal situations it takes letter form, in less formal situations can be transmitted by email, personal message from the writer to the reader
short reports
organized in either direct or indirect, addressed to an internal audience, middle ground formality
title page
remains to the last because it serves as a useful cover page and contains the most important identifying information, contains identification information such as the title, identification of the writer build around who what where when why
progress reports
routine operational report except it tends to be sumbitted on an as-needed basis, focus on progress toward a specific goal, to show work is on track, typically set no form
routine operational reports
short report that keep supervisors, managers, and and team members informed about the companys operations
letter reports
shorter report form to present info to people outside of the organization
shorter reports usually solve routine problems
so they are likely to be written in the direct order
indirect order letters
tend to not use a subject line, following intro would be logical presentation and analysis of the information gathered
moving down the ladder to more informal and shorter reports
the need for direct order increases, @ bottom direct is a rule
executive summary
the report in miniature, serves as a preview to the report (meant for busy executives that can't read the whole report),
1st level (high formality)
title fly, title page, transmittal page, transmittal message, table of contents, executive summary, the report proper
4th level
title page, combo transmittal/executive summary, the report proper
3rd level
title page, table of contents, combination transmittal/ executive summary, the report proper
5th level
title page, the report proper
2nd level
title page, transmittal page, table of contents, executive summary, the report proper
formal situations
use impersonal writing
when using indirect order open with
coherent statement of your problem and purpose
reports written to external audiences
may or may not state the main conclusions or recommendations in the opening paragraphs, but it is customary to include these in the transmittal message since it doubles as an executive summary
structured coherence plan
for formal reports, a network of introductions, conclusions, and transitions that guide the reader to the report
formal reports
have pages before the reports called prefatory pages when the situation is formal and the report is long
problem-solving reports
help decision makers figure out what to do any time a problem arises within an organization
table of contents
if short report goes over 5 pages or 1500 words, it is the report outline in finished form
organize in indirect order if
if there is reason to believe it would be better for your readers to arrive at conclusions after a logical analysis of your data, FAVOR WHEN RECOMMENDING SOMETHING READERS WONT WANT TO HEAR (give reasoning first)
6th level
letter report
characteristics of a short report
little need for introductory information, predominance of the direct order, a more personal writing style, less need for structured coherence plan
direct order in long report form
main findings up front, in the letter of transmittal the executive summary or both, but report itself may be organized indirectly (fullest statements at end)
reports to external audiences
may or may not state the main conclusions or recommendations
direct order
BACKWARDS ORDER, start with conclusions and recommendations then stating the other info
indirect uses
3rd person
short reports consist of
4th and 5th steps of ladder
indirect order
IN NORMAL ORDER summary, MATCHES THE ORDER OF REPORT CONTENTS, start executive summary with with topic purpose, and origin of report, present key findings, analysis and state the main conclusions and recommendations
short reports
WRITTEN IN DIRECT ORDER (report starts with the most important information) , most common in business, everyday working reports, used for routine information that is vital to an organization's communication, don't need intro, not kept on file very long, intended only for a few readers
flyleaves
blank pages at the beginning and end of report
shorter reports
day to day problems, use personal pronouns
indirect order letters
do not use a subject line, open with brief background info
7th level
email or memo report