Qualities and Characteristics of Good Reports
A lot of reports are written daily. Some of them are intended to
document the progress of some activities, feasibility reports, investigation
reports, some of the reports are for monitoring purposes, some are evaluation
reports but it is clear that all the reports have some objective and purpose
behind it. That objective and purpose can only be achieved if a report has the
following qualities and characteristics:
1.
It should be factual: Every report should be
based on facts, verified information and valid proofs.
2.
Clear and Easily understandable: Explained
below
3.
Free from errors and duplication
4.
Should facilitate the decision makers in
making the right decision:
5.
Result focused and result oriented
6.
Well organized and structured
7.
Ethical reporting style
Reader-Friendly Readers are various stakeholders who receive
reports generated by M&E. If reports are reader-friendly, they are likely
to be read, remembered and acted upon. Following decisions need to be made by
CSOs to make their reports reader-friendly:
·
What do they need to know?
·
When do they need to know?
·
How do they like to know?
Easy, Simple Language M&E reports are meant to inform not
impress. Using easy, simple language, be it Urdu or English makes the report
friendly on reader. To do this, here are some useful tips:
·
Write only what is necessary
·
Avoid repetition and redundancy
·
Give interesting and relevant information
·
Avoid preaching or lecturing
·
Compose short and correct sentences
Purposeful Presentation Each report has some objective(s) to meet. The
“objective” comes from analyzing the needs of the reader. A CSO is working for
a project that has several donors, and is channeled through an agency that
needs to be informed about some specific things going on in the field. CSOs
reports are the main pathways or channels of information to the people who
decide to fund this and other such projects. Similarly, field reports are the
amin vehicles for the management of the CSOs to make decision regarding the
project itself. A good report presents facts and arguments in a manner that
supports the purpose of the report.
Organized and Well-Structured Each CSO comes up with a format of internal
reporting to suit its requirements. Reporting to donors is done on their
prescribed formats. The M&E system should be able to generate information
that can be organized using different formats. In the annex, this manual
provides some useful formats that can be customized by a CSO.
Result-Focused In general, all readers are interested in
the RESULTS. Therefore, one over-riding principle that CSOs should aim for in
all report writing is to report on the results of their activities. This
requires some analysis on their part that goes beyond a mere description of
their activities. Result-focused means that description of activities is liked
with the project objectives. This aspect must be addressed especially in the
project progress reports. According to Phil Bartle, “A good progress report is
not merely a descriptive activity report, but must analyze the results of those
reported activities. The analysis should answer the question, "How far
have the project objectives been reached?"
Timely
Prepared and Dispatched M&E
generate “Information Products”, a customized set of information according to
needs to a defined group of users. M&E’s information products are
time-bound for both internal and external stakeholders. Reports, in suitable
formats, need to be timely produced and made available to the readers. It is
useful to develop an Information Product Matrix (IPM) like the one described
below:
Straightforward
A good report is straight forward, honest
description. It contains no lies, no deception, no fluff. It is neat, readable
and to-the-point. It is well spaced, has titles and subtitles and is free of
language errors.
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