Informal Reports
Informal Reports
INFORMAL
REPORTS
Introduction or background
Support or reasons
Summary
SECTIONS OF INFORMAL
REPORTS Informal analytical reports typically include the following four
sections:
Introduction or background
Support or reasons
Recommendations
Conclusion or summary
Introduction or
Background
A short section introducing the
reader to the “why” of the report.
In more complex reports, the
introduction may include a
background, a problem
statement, specific objectives, or
all of the above.
SUPPORT OR REASONS
This is where you’ll include your facts, findings, and
data. Writers new to reports may make the mistake of
providing lists of data and other information found as a
result of research. However, most business managers
can find the information on their own with time. The
purpose of this section of a report is to present a
summary of main ideas from the research—it’s not
simply a collection of raw data.
RECOMMENDATIONS
This section is only found in analytical reports;
it shows how data supports the
recommendation given in the report.
Essentially, the author connects the logical data
items in a way that points to the
recommendation.
Thus, your report would be laid out like this: First you
would write your introduction, background, or problem.
The next section will be the support or reasons section,
which details facts, data, or findings that led you to your
conclusion.