Organize your analysis so you clearly define the issues and problem(s) to solve in the case, make sure you have a section in the report “base lining” the current situation including numbers if available, and then other sections documenting you analysis of practices around different topics of various chapters.

Organize your analysis so you clearly define the issues and problem(s) to solve in the case, make sure you have a section in the report “base lining” the current situation including numbers if available, and then other sections documenting you analysis of practices around different topics of various chapters. Make sure your report addresses the topics in several chapters but emphasizes certain of them. Your team may decide to address other issues not identified in the textbook (Collier, 2017).
A good management report usually includes an executive summary, a logical sequence of topics with ample use of headings and subheadings to “guide the reader” through the analysis, easy to follow exhibits with “example computations”, all assumptions clearly stated, a final/summary set of recommendations with summary numerical support if appropriate, and so on. Make sure you start and end strong. Poor report organization and/or writing can defeat a good analysis, so spend some time on this part of the assignment. The reader (your boss or client someday) should be able to smoothly move through the report without being confused (Collier, 2017).