Over the years, I've made most of the mistakes that can possibly be made (although to be fair, I'm fairly creative so continually invent more) but as a result I've eliminated a few simple pitfalls.
Here are some thoughts to make your life easier.
- Format the business case professionally. Spend the time to typeset it, lay it out well, use appropriate illustrations, and make the design look professional. If you don’t have the graphic design skills to do it yourself, find someone to help you with it. You’ve spent a lot of time on doing the analysis, interviews, and legwork, but in the years to come, most people will judge all that effort purely by the quality of the report. Make it worth reading, but put the odds in your favor—structure, format and present it in a way that will make people want to read it.
- Bind it. When you are happy with it and it has been peer reviewed, print it out and bind it. It does not matter if it is spiral-bound, comb-bound, hard-cover, wire-bound, or whatever. If you have done all the work to develop a professional business case, make sure it looks professional. It is all too easy for a manager to scribble comments on a report that is stapled together—after all, it looks like a draft. Conversely, it is easy to sign off on a professionally bound document. Even if it is not perfect (and we must admit, no document is ever truly perfect), it looks finished. If you want something signed and accepted—bind it!
- Corporate templates. Use the corporate style sheets, templates, or formats if they exist. People are more receptive to information presented in a familiar way.
- Back up your business case with a PowerPoint presentation. Build a succinct presentation of the key points using supporting diagrams (if they are relevant and aid communication). You may never need to present it, but if you do, you will look like a true professional. If asked to do a presentation, just say, “Sure thing, give me thirty minutes and I’ll have it ready.” Even if you never give your presentation using a projector, a four-page printout based on a PowerPoint template will look professional, and you again come out looking like a legend.
- Take one last read of your paper before you submit it and ask yourself: What would my audience want to know, see, or understand after reading it, and what action do I want them to take after reading it?
- Use diagrams, graphs, and visual aids wherever and whenever you can. Most of us are busy people — a picture paints a thousand words, and if you want to get your message across to someone who is skimming your document, put a graphic in for each key point.
- Tell a story. The human mind is more attuned to learning and interpreting information through stories rather than facts or statistics. We remember stories much more readily than we can recall facts. Find a way to link the key points in a narrative that speaks to emotion as much as it does to facts. It may be equally true to say that “Our Lost Time Injury Frequency (LTIF) rate was 0.04 percent last year” or that “Last year, forty-three out of our one thousand two hundred employees suffered injuries severe enough that they were unable to work one or more roistered shifts,” but the latter version gets the point across in a much more meaningful way. Where possible, use natural frequencies and real events to illustrate key points.
- Back the story up with facts and numbers. Use statistics, references, incident reports or in-house data wherever you can reasonably and appropriately do so. If you lack the facts, do not make promises by saying XYZ “will create” a certain result. If the message is important enough to include but you are missing the data, use a phrase such as “is likely to create” or “has potential to create…” For example: “Failure to adequately train staff as part of the project roll-out is likely to create delays and budget overruns due to additional help-desk intervention.” You still get the key message across, but your audience will not get distracted by refuting your unsubstantiated claim.
- Show us that it is not just something you made up on the weekend while watching sports. Include a list of all the people you consulted. Reference the documents, databases, and records you reviewed and list the dates, places, and attendees of all brainstorming workshops and the like. It adds credibility to the overall report and answers many of the questions that critics or budget holders will have regarding the analysis and recommendations.
- If it is big and important enough, hire communications experts to get the message across, especially when you are presenting plans and recommendations across a large organization. Like any product, good marketing and advertising pay for themselves many times over.
With thanks to PRESENTERMEDIA for the use of their clipart.

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