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WRITING REPORTS FOR WHOM?By Phil Bartle, PhDA Guide for Community MobilizersPART B: Who Should Receive Reports? Before deciding who should receive any report, it would be useful to review who benefits from those reports. Let us look at the benefits to each of these:
Benefits to the Author(s): At first glance, one might assume that the recipient benefits first and foremost from a report. Not quite! The first beneficiary is the author (or authors). Why is that? In our workshop, I asked the mobilizers to suggest why the author or authors might benefit from writing a report. Here are some of their suggestions:
A bonus benefit (possible, but not guaranteed) is feedback (advice, experience, recommendations, about the report, author, and others). After the authors, of course, the next beneficiaries are the recipients. Who Receive Reports? Consider the actors that should receive reports. (When writing reports, always remember who will read them). All can use reports for the same benefits as listed above. These can include the CBO (community based organization or the executive of the community project), LC (Local Council), CAO (District's Chief Executive Officer), DPC (District Programme Coordinator), the agency or project national headquarters (which might in turn report to UN, the government, home headquarters, and the donors). When objectives, strategies and activities are modified (based on reports) the project can be fine tuned and improved; then the target communities benefit from those reports. Decisions by community based organizations, such as sending copies of financial statements (when and to whom), and verbal reporting at community meetings, are made in similar brainstorming sessions as the facilitator trainer guides community members through the why and how. How Do Recipients Benefit? How do recipients of reports benefit? There are three main ways they can benefit: information, assessment, encouragement.
This table indicates that many different actors benefit from well written reports, and so that when reports are written, they should be written with those readers in mind. ––»«––Reporting Progress to the Community Executive:
Copyright: Phil BartleLast update: 2008/03/11 |
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