You write a progress report to inform a supervisor, associate, or customer about progress you've made on a project over a certain period of time. The project can be the design, construction, or repair of something, the study or research of a problem or question, or the gathering of information on a technical subject. You write progress reports when it takes well over three or four months to complete a project.
Functions and Contents of Progress Reports
In the progress report, you explain any or all of the following:
How much of the work is complete
What part of the work is currently in progress
What work remains to be done
What problems or unexpected things, if any, have arisen
How the project is going in general
Progress reports have several important functions:
Reassure recipients that you are making progress, that the project is going smoothly, and that it will be complete by the expected date.
Provide their recipients with a brief look at some of the findings or some of the work of the project.
Give their recipients a chance to evaluate your work on the project and to request changes.
Give you a chance to discuss problems in the project and thus to forewarn recipients.
Force you to establish a work schedule so that you'll complete the project on time
Monday, May 25, 2009
Online Technical Writing: Progress Reports
Posted by Maggie at 11:17 PM
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work report
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