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<blockquote data-quote="Jacob Miller" data-source="post: 80267" data-attributes="member: 5063"><p>Sorry I didn't see this come in earlier! </p><p></p><p>I would substantively agree with Dheepa's advice here. A business report isn't necessarily a letter addressed to a person so letter formatting would be superfluous. </p><p></p><p>If you were being asked to write something like a memo, letter of advice or letter of opinion to a client, however, proper letter formatting is generally advisable at that point. </p><p></p><p>In this particular context, there are a few ways you could go about laying it out. I would probably structure it as: </p><p></p><p>- title</p><p>- executive summary (in order of descending importance) </p><p>- risks (substantive points in order of descending importance) </p><p>- opportunities (substantive points in order of descending importance) </p><p></p><p>Hope this helps!</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Jacob Miller, post: 80267, member: 5063"] Sorry I didn't see this come in earlier! I would substantively agree with Dheepa's advice here. A business report isn't necessarily a letter addressed to a person so letter formatting would be superfluous. If you were being asked to write something like a memo, letter of advice or letter of opinion to a client, however, proper letter formatting is generally advisable at that point. In this particular context, there are a few ways you could go about laying it out. I would probably structure it as: - title - executive summary (in order of descending importance) - risks (substantive points in order of descending importance) - opportunities (substantive points in order of descending importance) Hope this helps! [/QUOTE]
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