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Writing Reports and Proposals at Work

Posted By: ELK1nG
Writing Reports and Proposals at Work

Writing Reports and Proposals at Work
Created by Sarzhan Jakonova | Last updated 2/2021
Duration: 1 hour | 1 section | 10 lectures | Video: 1280x720, 44 KHz | 323 MB
Genre: eLearning | Language: English + Sub

Reports are documents written for a specific purpose and audience. Dive deep and learn how to nail reports.

What you'll learn
Understand How Plan, Format and Write
Learn Rules of Writing
How to Revise
Become a Good Writer

Requirements
No previous experience requiredDesire to learn or improve business writingOpen mindedness is required
Description
Business reports come in all shapes and sizes from brief one-page duty reports to multichapter analyses. There is no set work report format since each one needs a unique style and structure. They key thing to keep in mind is why your boss needs the report. Focus on giving her the precise information she needs to make a well-considered business decision.
Writing proposals is part of the business. A strong business proposal is a top opportunity to win new business. It is the ultimate sales document, a condensed version of all the value your solution brings to a client’s problem. The thought of writing a proposal overwhelms many people, but the task does not have to be daunting.

Knowing the purpose of each section in a report is a must in any workplace.

The ability to write clear, concise documents is a highly desirable skill that is much different from writing letters, emails, or website content.

The creation of effective materials requires discipline, organization, and a keen eye for detail.
Reporting helps owners of businesses, companies ,organizations, or government to make prompt decision, plan accordingly and solve current problems.
It is also a means of internal communication within the organization.
Reports provide stakeholders an update on developments, future plans, readiness of a business in changing technology or government policy.
So what are you waiting for? Let’s get started…
Who this course is for:Full or part time employeesEngineers or project managersAdministrative clerks