Mathematics with Business Applications
6th EditionMcGraw-Hill Education
3,760 solutions
Accounting: What the Numbers Mean
9th EditionDaniel F Viele, David H Marshall, Wayne W McManus
345 solutions
Fundamentals of Financial Management, Concise Edition
10th EditionEugene F. Brigham, Joel Houston
777 solutions
Business Math
17th EditionMary Hansen
3,734 solutions
Recommended textbook solutionsMarketing Essentials
4th EditionGrady Kimbrell
2,121 solutions
Marketing Essentials: The Deca Connection
1st EditionCarl A. Woloszyk, Grady Kimbrell, Lois Schneider Farese
1,600 solutions
Advertising and Promotion: An Integrated Marketing Communications Perspective
12th EditionGeorge Belch, Michael Belch
211 solutions
Principles of Marketing, Global Edition
18th EditionGary Armstrong, Philip Kotler
267 solutions
Informative: Reports that present data without analysis or recommendations are primarily informational. For such reports, writers collect and organize facts, but they do not analyze the facts for readers. A trip report describing an employee's visit to a trade show, for example, is informational.
Analytical: Reports that provide data or findings, analyses, and conclusions are analytical. If requested, writers also supply recommendations. Analytical reports may intend to persuade readers to act or change their beliefs. For example, if you were writing a yardstick comparison report to evaluate several locations for a new automobile manufacturing plant, you would compare the locations using the same criteria and then provide a recommendation.
Recommended textbook solutions
The Language of Composition: Reading, Writing, Rhetoric
2nd EditionLawrence Scanlon, Renee H. Shea, Robin Dissin Aufses
661 solutions
Technical Writing for Success
3rd EditionDarlene Smith-Worthington, Sue Jefferson
468 solutions
Technical Writing for Success
3rd EditionDarlene Smith-Worthington, Sue Jefferson
468 solutions
Edge Reading, Writing and Language: Level C
David W. Moore, Deborah Short, Michael W. Smith
304 solutions