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High-impact business writing with AI

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Explore our range of courses, covering all topic areas of writing at work.

Choose from three formats: prescheduled trainer-led courses open to anyone, self-paced online learning and tailored in-house courses built around your needs.

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Business report writing

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Bid, tender and sales-proposal writing

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Writing exceptional board reports

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Policy and procedure writing

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Storytelling in business

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High-impact business writing with AI

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Greta Solomon

Rethinking creativity: a Q&A with Greta Solomon

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Is AI making our writing better – or worse? PR After Hours interview

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Resources

Whether your next task is a report, a press release or a presentation, a little help goes a long way. Find actionable, expert guides and tips in our Knowledge Hub.

Bids and proposals

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AI

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Business writing essentials

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Writing to the board

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Writing to customers

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Writing for marketing

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Technical writing

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Professional email writing

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Business report writing

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Corporate communications

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FAQs

You’ll find answers to the most common questions we get about our training on this page. If we haven’t answered your question, you can submit it there. 

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If you’re considering our training, these pages will give you a fuller picture of what we do and how we do it – and how it can help you or your team.

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Our writing analysis

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AI Ready

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Emphasis is the UK’s leading business-writing training company, offering specialist business-writing training and consultancy services to private and public sector organisations all over the world.

About us

Emphasis has been training companies and individuals in how to make their communication work for 25 years. Find out more about our story and our work below.

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About Us

Writing to the board

Insider content to help you plan and write targeted reports for your board or senior team

All articles

Trainer Kathy Gemmell on video still with play button

Do board report templates work? Our experts answer

Does spin have a place in board papers?

What your boss doesn’t want from your report

How to structure a business report

Writing a report for the board? Here’s what you need to know

How to write an executive summary for your board report – and why you should [with examples]

A board meeting with one person standing to present a paper, seen as if through lens

The problem with board report templates (and what you should do instead)

Quick questions

For those answers that don't need a full article

There's no one definitive answer to this. As a very general rule, we suggest aiming to stay within three to four pages at the most. And if your board or senior team (or a company template, if you have one) suggests or dictates a length, always stay within that. Do remember that – unlike at school – a word or page limit is not the same as a target to hit! The aim is to provide the necessary information and requested level of detail that allows the report to do its job. That may be to make sure the board is updated or able to make a decision based on the recommendations you make or research you present. If you can do that in a more succinct report, that's great. Don't feel you have to add more filler just to up the word count.
We generally advise not to use PowerPoint for reports – it's designed for presentations and that's what it's best for. It's easy for slides to end up crammed with tiny text that's tough to read. However, views on best practice do vary from organisation to organisation. Check with the board or senior team whether they prefer one over the other. Crucially, if you do use PowerPoint for your report, remember that a version designed to be read as a report is very unlikely to also work well as a presentation deck.
It can be very challenging to get mixed messages about what you should be producing. In this case, write your report as succinctly as you can, and add the detail the director will want in an appendix. Make it easy for them to find the extra information they want: refer them to the page numbers where they'll find this detail at the relevant points of the main report.

Useful resources

Prompting success

The Boardroom Advantage

Report briefing template

Proofreading checklist

Case studies

See how we've helped our clients