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Writing Progress and Status Reports
Read more about proposals in Ch. 16.
Read more about completion reports and recommendation reports in Ch. 18.
A progress report describes an ongoing project. A status report, sometimes called an activity report, describes the entire range of operations of a department or division. For example, the director of marketing for a manufacturing company might submit a monthly status report.
A progress report is an intermediate communication between a proposal (the argument that a project be undertaken) and a completion report (the comprehensive record of a completed project) or a recommendation report (an argument to take further action). Progress reports let you check in with your audience.
Regardless of how well the project is proceeding, explain clearly and fully what has happened and how those activities or events will affect the overall project. Your tone should be objective, neither defensive nor casual. Unless your own ineptitude or negligence caused a problem, you’re not to blame. Regardless of the news you are delivering—good, bad, or mixed—your job is the same: to provide a clear and complete account of your activities and to forecast the next stage of the project.
When things go wrong, you might be tempted to cover up problems and hope that you can solve them before the next progress report. This course of action is unwise and unethical. Chances are that problems will multiply, and you will have a harder time explaining why you didn’t alert your readers earlier.
ETHICS NOTE
REPORTING YOUR PROGRESS HONESTLY
Withholding bad news is unethical because it can mislead readers. As sponsors or supervisors of the project, readers have a right to know how it is going. If you find yourself faced with any of the following three common problems, consider responding in these ways:
The time pattern and the task pattern, two organizational patterns frequently used in progress and status reports, are illustrated in Figure 17.3. A status report is usually organized according to task; by its nature, this type of report covers a specified time period.
In the time pattern, you describe all the work that you have completed in the present reporting period and then sketch in the work that remains. Some writers include a section on present work, which enables them to focus on a long or complex task still in progress.
The task pattern enables you to describe, in order, what has been accomplished on each task. Often a task-oriented structure incorporates the chronological structure.
THE TIME PATTERN | THE TASK PATTERN |
Discussion A. Past Work B. Future Work |
Discussion A. Task 1 1. Past work 2. Future work B. Task 2 1. Past work 2. Future work |
Figure 17.3 Organizational Patterns in Reports
In the conclusion of a progress or status report, evaluate how the project is proceeding. In the broadest sense, there are two possible messages: things are going well, or things are not going as well as anticipated.
If appropriate, use appendixes for supporting materials, such as computations, printouts, schematics, diagrams, tables, or a revised task schedule. Be sure to cross-reference these appendixes in the body of the report, so that readers can find them easily.
Projecting an Appropriate Tone in a Progress or Status Report
Whether the news is positive or negative, these two suggestions will help you sound like a professional.
OVERSTATED | We are sure the device will do all that we ask of it, and more. |
REALISTIC | We expect that the device will perform well and that, in addition, it might offer some unanticipated advantages. |