Executive Summary Add Option Field

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How to Add Option Field Executive Summary

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Executive summaries should include the following components: An explanation of why the research was performed. The results that the research yielded. Proposed suggestions for how management or leadership should best alter strategies based on the findings of research.
An executive summary is a brief section at the beginning of a long report, article, recommendation, or proposal that summarizes the document. It is not background and not an introduction. People who read only the executive summary should get the essence of the document without fine details.
An executive summary (or management summary) is a short document or section of a document produced for business purposes. ... It usually contains a brief statement of the problem or proposal covered in the major document(s), background information, concise analysis and main conclusions.
Summary (Abstract) The summary should briefly describe the content of the report. It should cover the aims of the report, what was found and what, if any, action is called for. Aim for about 1/2 a page in length and avoid detail or discussion; just outline the main points.
Describe a problem, need or goal. Underneath the words "EXECUTIVE SUMMARY" explain in one or two sentences (at most) why a decision is needed. ... Describe the desired outcome. ... Describe your proposed solution. ... Explain how you'll overcome risks. ... Ask for the decision you want made.
Position in Document The executive summary is include after the table of contents and before the introduction. Length in general, the executive summary should be 5 10% of the main document.
It must not refer by number to figures, tables, or references contained elsewhere in the report. Executive summaries do occasionally contain a figure, table, or footnote--a practice appropriate as long as that information is integral to the summary. ... Abstracts may also vary in the type of information they provide.
Summaries should summarize the work/report and anyone reading the summary will not need to go to references to check on sources since those are given in the report itself. I can see exceptions from this if one or two references are key to the report by for example, being ground-breaking or by being in conflict.
Therefore, the Executive Summary must be a separate, stand-alone document, sufficient in content to ensure that the reader can completely understand the contents of the longer document. ... Other writers will stick to 'between one and three pages,' which is a commonly touted acceptable length for an Executive Summary.
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