Overview
Executive reports fail when they are written for the analyst, not the executive. They bury the conclusion in the final section after 12 pages of methodology. They present data without interpretation, leaving the executive to do the analytical work the report was supposed to do. They use technical language that requires translation. They are comprehensive when they should be decisive.
An executive report has one job: give the decision-maker the information they need to make a specific decision, in the minimum time required. Every structural choice — where the conclusion goes, how findings are sequenced, what level of detail is included — is a decision about the executive's time and cognitive load.
The Executive Report Framework Prompt generates a complete executive report structure: conclusion-first architecture, business-impact quantification, evidence sequencing, and a language calibration that translates analytical findings into the terms executives use to make decisions.
What you get: - Conclusion-first report architecture - Business-impact quantification in revenue/cost terms - Evidence sequencing from most to least critical - Executive language calibration - One-page summary specification
Built for: analysts, data scientists, and strategy professionals who need to communicate analytical findings to C-suite and board-level audiences who make decisions, not read reports.