7. Reports

Technical reports (including handbooks and guides) have various designs depending on the industry, profession, or organization. This chapter shows you one traditional design. If you are taking a technical writing course, make sure the design presented in this chapter is acceptable. The same is true if you are writing a technical report in a science, business, or government context.

Specifications for reports involve layout, organization and content, format of headings and lists, the design of the graphics, and so on. The advantage of a required structure and format for reports is that you or anyone else can expect them to be designed in a familiar way—readers know what to look for and where to look for it. Reports are usually read quickly—people are in a hurry to get to the key facts, the conclusions, and other essential information. A report written in this standard format is like a familiar neighborhood.

When you analyze the design of a technical report, notice how repetitive some sections are. This duplication has to do with how people with different needs and job functions read reports. They don’t read reports straight through, and they may not read the entire report. For example, an executive may focus on the executive summary and skim a few other relevant sections because she only needs a broad overview to be familiar with the situation; her subordinates in the organization will be tasked with the detail work. They’re more likely to do a closer read of the report, but may still skim or skip the sections that they don’t need to read in order to function effectively in the organization. Your challenge is to design reports so that these readers encounter necessary key facts and conclusions, no matter how much of the report they read or in what order they read it.

You can view some example reports here.

The standard components of the typical technical report are discussed in this chapter. The following sections guide you through each of these components, pointing out the key features. As you read and use these guidelines, remember that these are guidelines, not commandments. Different companies, professions, and organizations have their own varied guidelines for reports—you’ll need to adapt your practice to those.

Letter of Transmittal

The transmittal letter is a cover letter. It is either attached to the outside of the report with a paper clip or is bound within the report. It is a communication from you—the report writer—to the recipient, the person who requested the report and who may even be paying you for your expert consultation. Essentially, it says “Okay, here’s the report that we agreed I’d complete by such-and-such a date. Briefly, it contains this and that, but does not cover this or that. Let me know if it meets your needs.” The transmittal letter explains the context—the events that brought the report about. It contains information about the report that does not belong in the report.

In the example of the transmittal letter in Figure 1, below, notice the standard business-letter format. If you write an internal report, use the memorandum format instead. (Recall from chapter one that letters are generally used for external communications; memos are appropriate for internal communications.) In either case, the contents and organization are the same.

First paragraph. Cites the name of the report, putting it in italics. It also mentions the date of the agreement to write the report.

Middle paragraph. Focuses on the purpose of the report and gives a brief overview of the contents.

Final paragraph. Encourages the reader to get in touch if there are questions, comments, or concerns. It closes with a gesture of good will, expressing hope that the reader finds the report satisfactory.

As with any other element in a report, you may have to modify the contents of this letter (or memo) for specific situations. For example, you might want to add another paragraph, listing questions you’d like readers to consider as they review the report.

Image of report transmittal letter and report cover.

Figure 1. Transmittal letter and report cover (with cover label).

Cover and Label

If your report is over ten pages, bind it in some way and create a label for the cover.

Covers

Covers give reports a solid, professional look as well as protection. You can choose from many types of covers, but the best are those that allow reports to lie open by themselves. This type uses a plastic spiral for the binding and thick, card-stock paper for the covers. Check with your local copy shop for these types of bindings; they are inexpensive and add to the professionalism of your work. Figure 1, above, shows a simulated example of a plastic spiral binding.

Labels

Be sure to devise a label for the cover of your report. It’s a step that some report writers forget. Without a label, a report is anonymous; it gets ignored.

The best way to create a label is to use your word-processing software to design one on a standard page with a graphic box around the label information. Print it out, then go to a copy shop and have it photocopied directly onto the report cover.

The label should contain only the report title, your name, your organization’s name, a report tracking number, and a date. There are no standard requirements for the label, although your company or organization should have its own requirements. (An example of a report label is shown below.)

Abstract and Executive Summary

Most technical reports contain at least one abstract—sometimes two, in which case the abstracts play different roles. Abstracts summarize the contents of a report, but the different types do so in different ways:

  • Descriptive abstract. This type provides an overview of the purpose and contents of the report. In some report designs, the descriptive abstract is placed at the bottom of the title page, as shown in Figure 2, below.

Figure 2. Report title page with descriptive abstract. (Traditionally, the abstract is placed on the title page (not the cover page).

  • Executive summary. Another common type is the executive summary, which also summarizes the key facts and conclusions contained in the report. See the example shown in Figure 3, below. It’s as if you used a yellow highlighter to mark the key sentences in the report and then siphoned them all out onto a separate page and edited them for readability. Typically, executive summaries are one-tenth to one-twentieth the length of reports ten to fifty pages long. For longer reports, those over fifty pages, the executive summary should not go over two pages. The point of the executive summary is to provide a synopsis of the contents, something that can be read quickly.

If the executive summary, introduction, and transmittal letter strike you as repetitive, remember that readers don’t necessarily start at the beginning of a report and read page by page to the end. They skip around: they may scan the table of contents; they usually skim the executive summary for key facts and conclusions. They may read carefully only a section or two from the body of the report and then skip the rest. For these reasons, reports are designed with some duplication so that readers will be sure to see the important information no matter where they dip into the report.

Table of Contents

You’re probably familiar with tables of contents (TOC) but may never have stopped to look at their design. The TOC shows readers what topics are covered in the report, how those topics are discussed (the subtopics), and on which page numbers those sections and subsections start.

In creating a TOC, you have a number of design decisions:

  • Levels of headings to include. In longer reports, consider including only the top two levels of headings. This keeps the TOC from becoming long and unwieldy. The TOC should provide an at-a-glance way of finding information in the report quickly.
  • Indentation, spacing, and capitalization. Notice in Figure 3, below, that items in each of the three levels of headings are aligned with each other. Although you can’t see it in the illustration, page numbers are right-aligned with each other. Notice also the capitalization: Main chapters or sections are all caps; first-level headings use initial caps on each main word; lower-level sections use initial caps on the first word only.
  • Vertical spacing. Notice that the first-level sections have extra space above and below, which increases readability.

One final note: Make sure the words in the TOC are the same as they are in the text. As you write and revise, you might change some of the headings—don’t forget to change the TOC accordingly.

Image of a Table of Contents page and an executive summary page from a technical report.

Figure 3. Table of Contents (which comes first) then the Executive Summary.

This TOC uses decimal-numbering style for the chapter and section numbers, which is common in reports.

List of Figures and Tables

The list of figures has many of the same design considerations as the table of contents. Readers use the list of figures to find the illustrations, diagrams, tables, and charts in your report.

Complications arise when you have both tables and figures. Strictly speaking, figures are illustrations, drawings, photographs, graphs, and charts. Tables are rows and columns of words and numbers; they are not considered figures.

For longer reports that contain dozens of figures and tables each, create separate lists of figures and tables. Put them together on the same page if they fit, as shown in the illustration below. You can combine the two lists under the heading, “List of Figures and Tables,” and identify the items as figures or tables, as is done in Figure 4, below.

Introduction

An essential element of any report is its introduction—make sure you are clear on its real purpose and contents. In a technical report, the introduction prepares the reader to read the main body of the report.

Image of a report introduction page and a list of figures and tables page.

Figure 4. List of figures and tables followed by the introduction. If there are no tables, make it “List of Figures.” In a technical writing course, ask your instructor if the decimal-numbering style for headings is required.

Body of the report

The body of the report is of course the main text of the report, the sections between the introduction and conclusion. Report pages contain or make use of the elements listed below. See Figure 5, also below, for an illustration of sample pages.

Headings

In all but the shortest reports (two pages or less), use headings to indicate the different topics and subtopics covered. Headings enable readers to skim your report and dip down at those points to find pertinent information they want.

Bulleted and Numbered Lists

In the body of a report, also use bulleted, numbered, and two-column lists where appropriate. Lists help by emphasizing key points, by making information easier to follow, and by breaking up solid walls of text.

Symbols, Numbers, and Abbreviations

Technical discussions ordinarily contain lots of symbols, numbers, and abbreviations. Remember that the rules for using numerals as opposed to words are different in the technical world. The old rule about writing out all numbers below 10 does not always apply in technical reports.

Image of sample technical report pages.

Figure 5. Excerpt from the body of a technical report. In a technical writing course, ask your instructor if the decimal-numbering style for headings is required. Also, a different documentation system, such as MLA or APA, may be required. The IEEE documentation system is for engineers.

Graphics and Figure Titles

In technical report, you’re likely to need drawings, diagrams, tables, and charts. These not only convey certain kinds of information more efficiently but also give your report an added look of professionalism and authority. If you’ve never put these kinds of graphics into a report, there are some relatively easy ways to do so—you don’t need to be a professional graphic artist. Graphics are covered in more detail in Module 3 of this course.

Cross-References

You may need to point readers to closely related information within your report, or to other books and reports that have useful information. These are called cross-references. For example, they can point readers from the discussion of a mechanism to an illustration of it. They can point readers to an appendix where background on a topic is given (background that just does not fit in the text). And they can point readers outside your report to other information—to articles, reports, and books that contain information related to yours. When you create cross-references, follow these guidelines presented in cross-references. Electronic documents of course present a more convenient method of cross-referencing, in the form of hyperlinks.

Conclusions

For most reports, you’ll need to include a final section. When you plan the final section of your report, think about the functions it can perform in relation to the rest of the report. The conclusion may be a very tight summary of the major elements of the report, a final summation of your analysis of the situation, or whatever you need it to be, depending on the type of report you are writing. But it should give the reader a feeling of closure, a sense that the story has come to an end.

Appendixes

Appendixes are those extra sections following the conclusion. What do you put in appendixes?— anything that does not comfortably fit in the main part of the report but cannot be left out of the report altogether. The appendix is commonly used for large tables of data, big chunks of sample code, fold-out maps, background that is too basic or too advanced for the body of the report, or large illustrations that just do not fit in the body of the report. Anything that you feel is too large for the main part of the report or that you think would be distracting and interrupt the flow of the report is a good candidate for an appendix. Note that appendixes are identified by letter (Appendix A, B, C, and so on).

Information Sources

Documenting your information sources is all about establishing, maintaining, and protecting your credibility in the profession. You must cite borrowed information regardless of the shape or form in which you present it. Whether you directly quote it, paraphrase it, summarize it or use it in a graphic—it’s still borrowed information. Whether it comes from a book, article, diagram, table, web page, product brochure, or an expert whom you interview in person—it’s still borrowed information.

Documentation systems vary according to professionals and fields. Engineers use the IEEE system, examples of which are shown throughout this chapter. Another commonly used documentation system is provided by the American Psychological Association (APA) The MLA format comes from the Modern Language Association and is frequently used in academia, particularly in the humanities.

Page Numbering

The page-numbering style used in traditional report design differs slightly from contemporary report design. In the traditional design, all pages before the introduction (first page of the body of the report) use lowercase Roman numerals; after the introduction, Arabic numerals are used. In the contemporary design, all pages throughout the document use Arabic numerals.

In both traditional and contemporary design, all pages in the report (everything between the front and back covers) are numbered, but on some pages, the numbers are not displayed. Special pages, such as the title page and page one of the introduction, do not display page numbers.

Page numbers can be placed in one of several areas on the page. Usually, the best and easiest choice is to place page numbers at the bottom center of the page (remember to hide them on special pages). If you place page numbers at the top of the page, the right-hand corner is better than the center of the page. Many word-processing programs give you a choice of headers that include page number options. Choose one that will not interfere with chapter or section openers, and remember to hide page numbers on special pages.

Note: Longer reports often use the page-numbering style known as folio-by-chapter or double-enumeration (for example, pages in Chapter 2 would be numbered 2-1, 2-2, 2-3, and so on). Similarly, tables and figures would use this numbering style. This style eases the process of adding and deleting pages.