This executive summary comes from a corporate report on purchasing Android smartphones for employees. The questions below
Question:
This executive summary comes from a corporate report on purchasing Android smartphones for employees. The questions below ask you to think about the discussion of executive summaries. Respond to each of the questions in memo form.....
On May 11, we received approval to study whether Android smartphones could help our 20 engineers send and receive email, monitor their schedules, take notes, and access reference sources they need in the field. In our study, we addressed these problems experienced by many of our engineers:
- They have missed deadlines and meetings and lost client information.
- They have been unable to access important files and reference materials from the field.
- They have complained about the weight--sometimes more than 40 pounds--of the binders and other materials that they have to carry.
- They have to spend time keyboarding notes that they take in the field.
In 2014, missed meetings and other schedule problems cost the company over $400,000 in lost business. And our insurance carrier settled a claim for $50,000 from an engineer wo experienced back and shoulder problems due to the weight of his pack.
We researched the capabilities of Android smartphones, then established these criteria for our analysis:
- The device must weigh less than 5 ounces.
- It must run on Android 4.2.2 or higher.
- It must have at least 2GB RAM.
- It must have at least a 1.9-GHz Quad Core.
- It must have a microSD slot.
- It must have at least a 4-inch screen.
- It must have a camera with a resolution of 10.0MP or better.
- It must have on-device encryption.
- It must be Microsoft Office compatible.
- It must cost $700 or less.
On the basis of our analysis, we recommend that the company purchase 20 Samsung Galaxy 4 smartphones, for a total cost of $12,980. These devices best meet all our technical and cost criteria.
- How clearly do the writers explain the background? Identify the problem or opportunity they describe in this executive summary.
- Do the writers discuss the methods? If so, identify the discussion.
- Identify the findings: the results, conclusions, and recommendations. How clearly have the writers explained the benefits to the company?
- What else would you change to make this report more useful to the company?