Autograph Executive Summary Template

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Executive summaries should include the following components: Write it last. Capture the reader's attention. Make sure your executive summary can stand on its own. Think of an executive summary as a more condensed version of your business plan. Include supporting research. Boil it down as much as possible.
Remember, every executive summary is--and should be--unique. Depending on the size of the business plan or investment proposal you're sending, the executive summary's length will vary. However, the consensus is that an executive summary should be between one and four pages long.
An executive summary is a concise summary of a longer report or proposal that highlights the important points, problems, solutions, findings and conclusions. It is generally written for an outside audience or executive in a way that allows the reader to grasp the essentials without having to read all the materials.
It is usually written last (so that it accurately reflects the content of the report) and is usually about two hundred to three hundred words long (i.e. not more than a page).
Introduce: Begin with a brief introduction that states the purpose and major points of the report. Discuss the Main Points: Include a level heading for each main point you will cover; these headings should appear in the same order as they do in the full report. Write a brief paragraph for each main point.
Your executive summary should include: The name, location, and mission of your company. A description of your company, including management, advisors, and brief history. Your product or service, where your product fits in the market, and how your product differs from competitors in the industry.
A summary begins with an introductory sentence that states the text's title, author and main point of the text as you see it. A summary is written in your own words. A summary contains only the ideas of the original text. Do not insert any of your own opinions, interpretations, deductions or comments into a summary.
If you are just writing a summary, you will probably just start with a first sentence that tells the author, title and main idea. Then the rest of the first paragraph should give the basic overview of the main points of the article.
Executive summaries are frequently read in place of the main document, so spell out all uncommon symbols, acronyms, or other terminology. In most documents, the executive summary is the first section of the document appearing after the table of contents and before the introduction.
Introduce: Begin with a brief introduction that states the purpose and major points of the report. Discuss the Main Points: Include a level heading for each main point you will cover; these headings should appear in the same order as they do in the full report. Write a brief paragraph for each main point.
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.
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. Remember that the summary is the first thing that is read.
As its name suggests, an executive summary summarizes, or reviews the main points of, a longer document or report for a reader that does not have time to read the entire report. For example, a ten-page paper or report would require a one-page executive summary.
Arrange the summary in the same order as the long document, with the same major headings. Summarize each section with up to five sentences, including the same details and conclusions as in the report. Do not include technical language or jargon.
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.
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