An Executive Summary
An Executive Summary
An executive summary is a thorough overview of a research report or other type of document that
synthesizes key points for its readers, saving them time and preparing them to understand the study's
overall content. It is a separate, stand-alone document of sufficient detail and clarity to ensure that the
reader can completely understand the contents of the main research study. An executive summary can
be anywhere from 1-10 pages long depending on the length of the report, or it can be the summary of
more than one document [e.g., papers submitted for a group project].
Executive summaries are used mainly when a research study has been developed for an
organizational partner, funding entity, or other external group that participated in the research . In
such cases, the research report and executive summary are often written for policy makers outside of
academe, while abstracts are written for the academic community. Professors, therefore, assign the
writing of executive summaries so students can practice synthesizing and writing about the contents of
comprehensive research studies for external stakeholder groups.
Christensen, Jay. Executive Summaries Complete The Report. California State University
Northridge; Clayton, John. "Writing an Executive Summary that Means Business." Harvard
Management Communication Letter (July 2003): 2-4; Keller, Chuck. "Stay Healthy with a
Winning Executive Summary." Technical Communication 41 (1994): 511-517; Murphy, Herta A.,
Herbert W. Hildebrandt, and Jane P. Thomas. Effective Business Communications. New York:
McGraw-Hill, 1997; Vassallo, Philip. "Executive Summaries: Where Less Really is More." ETC.:
A Review of General Semantics 60 (Spring 2003): 83-90.
Clarity in Writing
One of the biggest mistakes you can make is related to the clarity of your executive summary. Always
note that your audience [or audiences] are likely seeing your research study for the first time. The best
way to avoid a disorganized or cluttered executive summary is to write it after the study is completed.
Always follow the same strategies for proofreading that you would for any research paper.