|
|||||
VU
Lesson
32
MARKET
REPORTS
The
place where we go to buy or
sell commodities is commonly known as
market. Technically
speaking,
market
is not a place or bazaar
where we go to buy or sell,
but it is indeed a contact of buyer
and seller. The
world
has become a global village making buying
and selling possible without
going anywhere. Information
Technology
has mainly played its part
in doing so.
Prof.
Chapman says while defining
the market that it refers
not a place but to a
commodity or
commodities
and buyers and sellers of
the same who are in direct
competition with one
another. We can
name
these as Rice Market, Wheat
Market, Yarn Market, Fruit
Market, etc.
How
Market Works
1.
The
operations of transferring goods or services
from the producers to the consumers
can also be
considered
as marketing operations, though the market
basically determines the
price.
2.
The
term Marketing also deals
with providing facilities to producers
and consumers.
3.
It
also creates place, time and
possession utilities.
4.
To
make the things easier, Market
can be divided into
different sections. Each
section deals in only
one
commodity.
5.
Sale
is done by sampling. Experts supervise this
sale. This system saves time
and money.
6.
Buyers
and sellers have their
own representatives in the market
known as brokers, agents,
dealers,
etc.
They have got an important
role to play in the market. They
reach and provide the
commodities to
buyers
and sellers. They receive
commission for their
services.
7.
Some
buyers and sellers make
"Future planning to earn
profit. They make contracts
of buying and
selling
in future. They neither make delivery
nor pay the price until the
promised period. They
earn,
expecting
a rise or fall in
price.
8.
By
using Information Technology, the trader
is able to compete from one
corner of the world to
the
other in a very short time.
9.
Experts
prepare bulletins and market-reports
for commercial information
and publish them
daily,
weekly,
monthly or annually.
Newspapers,
Television, Radio and
Internet are also used
for this purpose.
Classification
of Markets
We
can classify markets in
different ways:
1)
Markets
may be classified in respect of ownership
or area of operation.
2)
Based
on the volume of transactions markets
may be classified into
wholesale and retail.
3)
Based
on the things bought and sold, we
have
(a)
commodity and (b) capital
market.
Commodity
Market
Raw
materials or manufactured products
are dealt as commodities.
Every commodity has a
different
method of its sale depending
upon its nature. The
nature of commodity also
affects the process of
delivery
in commodity market. Different
commodities have different
methods of delivery.
Raw
agricultural and mineral produces are
dealt in the produce exchange market
which is scientifically
organized
commodity
market.
Manufactured
or semi-manufactured commodities are
dealt in the Manufactured Goods
Market.
Precious
materials like gold, silver,
etc. are dealt in the Bullion Market.
These markets work only in
specific areas of
the
world.
Capital
Market
The
capital Market fulfills the
requirements of capital for
industrial and commercial
organizations.
Capital
is the backbone of an industry. We first
need capital to start an industry
and then to run
it.
136
VU
The
capital market can further
be divided into three
sections.
(1)
Money
Market (2)
The
Foreign Exchange Market
and
(3)
The
Stock Exchange
Market.
1.
The
money market only deals
with short-term loans. It finances the
existing business operations.
The
funds of the public are invested to
gain profits. Bank is used as
agent. Through this agent
industrial and
business
organizations are lent. Then
again this agent is used to
receive the money.
2.
The
foreign exchange market mainly
deals with the buying and
selling of foreign currencies. It is
a
very
specific market. It has got
a key role to play in the import
export trade.
3.
The
stock exchange market is a
well organized market which
is helpful in buying and
selling of
stocks
and shares of many
industrial and commercial
organizations. The expansion of this
market is directly
related
to the expansion of industrial and
commercial concerns.
Wholesale
Market
When
commodities are supplied directly to
dealers, it is known as a wholesale
market.
Retail
Market
When
commodities are sold
directly to consumers, it is known as a
Retail Market.
Market
Report
Definition
A
market report describes the
condition of a commodity in the market on a
certain date for a
specific
period. It points out the
business conditions in a market at a
given time.
Market
Report may be of a day, a week, a
month, a year or even a number of
years.
Daily
Market Report shows the price of
goods on a mentioned date. It also
describes the closing
rates
of the previous day, the opening rates of
that day, the highest and
the lowest rates and the
demand and
supply
of the commodities on that particular
day.
Daily
newspapers, television, radio and
internet give this information. Consumers
take more
interest
in daily market report than
traders.
Weekly
Market Report gives the condition of the
commodities for the past six
days. It contains closing
rates
of
the last week, the opening
rates of that week, the
highest and lowest rates
and the closing rates of
that
week.
This report also determines
the causes of variation in price
and the expected price movement in
the
coming
week. Business communities
show a keen interest in such
reports.
Monthly
Market Report is an analysis of business
done during the whole month.
These reports are
prepared
for comparatively stable market
and a permanent demand. This
report describes the closing
rate of
the
commodities in the previous month, the
opening rate of the month,
highest and lowest and
closing rate
of
the month. Newspapers, trade journals
and monthly bulletins
publish these
reports.
Value
of Reading a Market Report
The
Market Report makes us aware of the
volume and nature of
business in the market.
Traders
become
aware of different conditions of the
market. They can know
something about the demand
and
supply
of a commodity.
Market
Reports help people guess the
future movements of price.
The market condition is
exposed
to
everybody as a result of which prices
become stable. These prices
can be compared at different
markets.
Qualities
Of A Good Market
Report
A
person writing a Market Report should
have a comprehensive knowledge of the
matter that has
to
be reported. He must always keep in
mind the following points.
137
VU
1.
Normally
a Market Report is not personal. It
should be written using third
person and the past
tense.
2.
General
readers should be able to understand the
technical terms used in the
report.
3.
Words
should be used economically. Unnecessary
details must be avoided. It should not be
so
short
that misses the essential
information.
4.
There
should be a good analysis of changes of
prices and demand and
supply relationship.
5.
Market
Report should be based upon the facts.
Events should be written in the minute
details. Any
writer
of Market Report should be unbiased while
concluding his report.
How
to read a Market
Report
To
comprehend a Market Report fully, it is
necessary to read it carefully. Sometimes
even an
educated
person faces difficulties to
understand it. More practice
is required to understand a market
report.
One
should specially note the nature of
report (daily, weekly, monthly or
annual) the nature of
commodity,
volume
of business and the trend of the
market.
How
to explain a Market Report
Sometimes
a market report is reproduced
and sometimes it is explained. While
reproducing a
Market
Report technical terms should concentrate
on the given matter. Do not try to add or
omit
something.
While
explaining a Market Report try to
extract the hidden meaning.
First of all explain all
the
technical
terms separately, then
mention the price
clearly.
After
following the above instructions explain the
subject matter (of the
report) clearly.
Model
Market Reports
A
Report On Karachi Cotton Market
Cotton
Easy Amid Thin
Trading
Karachi:
The
cotton market failed to maintain a
firm posture on Monday as
spinners showed
reluctance
to chase the rising prices. However,
needy spinners continued to
pick up quality lots at Rs
2000
level.
The official spot rate
was marked up by Rs 20 at Rs
2000.
Cotton
prices moved up to Rs 2050 level on
Saturday owing to spinners'
fear that lint supply
would
be
interrupted during elections
and ginners/ growers' strong
resistance to decline in lint
prices. There
seemed
to be an unwritten agreement between
ginners and growers to make
joint efforts to stave off
the
threat
of price decline. Hence despite the
spinners' reluctance to pay higher
asking prices, the
ginners
maintained
a firm posture. As a result the
needy spinners picked up stray lots of
quality lint at Rs
2000.
Some
low quality stuff, however,
changed hands at Rs
1925.
Most
of the spinners remained glued to the
side lines as they did not
considers it feasible to lift at
the
prevailing
prices in view of uncertain outlook of
the international yarn market.
The current prices
are
understood
to be well above world
parity. It remains to be seen whether
ginners are able to hold the
price
line
when odds are in favour of
buyers.
A
Report on Lahore Jute
Market
On
the 30th September, 2002 Lahore
Jute Market started steadily
but closed on a subdued
note.
Transaction
was found very slow. Volume of
business was limited.
Trading interest showed
decline. March
delivery
which started at 90.50
against its previous close at 90
reached 91. The lowest
touched was 89.
November
delivery declined form 98 to
97.
There
was an estimation of future business
about 10,000 bales. Expected immediate
turnover was
500
till 5 p.m.
Arrivals:
The
arrival of Jute bales at the Lahore
Jute market were 700
bales out of which 300
bales
were
form Sarhad, 200 bales
from Sind and 100
from Rahim Yar
Khan.
138
VU
Spot
rates were as
follows.
Asli
Punjabi
90.00
Morni
75..00
Cheeta
ZB
91.00
SS
Reet
80.00
Babil
89.00
Lajwab
79.00
Bahar
3
90.00
Tarzan
83.00
Stock
Exchange Report
The
KSE 100-share index managed
to finish above the coveted level of
2,000 points after
four
previous
abortive bids, indicating
that it could maintain its forward
thrust in the coming weeks also,
boosted
by
some positive corporate
developments.
Above
the market dividend and
bonus shares pouring in each
day have altogether changed
the
investor's
future perceptions about the
size of capital gains and
price appreciation on selected counters
and
no
one is inclined to miss the rising
market at this stage.
The
interesting feature were the massively
battered genuine investors
who abhorred to re-enter
market
but were claimed to have
resumed their covering purchases on
low-priced blue chips,
lured
apparently
by the bait of high dividends.
An
accelerated pace of sell-off of the
state-owned units and higher dividend
annouoncements by most of
the
leading companies continued to inspire
strong short covering form all quarters,
signaling the market is
heading
to establish new records,
both in terms of price
flare-ups and trading
volumes.
The
bull mood to stay above the
2,000 point index level is
well manifested in
investors'
perception
who were not weighed
down by the Wednesday's terrorist
killing in the city and
behaved orderly.
A
Report on An Export
Marketing
Strategy
for the Defence
Industry
The
global defence market has
many players competing for
contracts. The United States
leads the
pack
with a 55 per cent market
share. Russia and the European
industrial countries account
for most of the
other
45 per cent. In recent years, however, a
number of countries in the Asian-African region,
whose
defence-manufacturing
base is large, have begun to
enter the market as emerging
defence exporters, or
EDEs.
Pakistan,
which has a growing and
increasingly sophisticated defence
industry, is one such EDE.
Its
defence
industry now has the technical
expertise and production capability to
grow into a $ 2 billion to $ 3
billion
a year export industry over the
next five years. This, however,
will require a sustained and
well
thought
out marketing strategy and a
continuing emphasis on product
improvement.
During
the last two decades defence
spending has been on the
rise in Asia. During 1980-90
defence
spending
in Asia grew at over 40 per
cent. During 1990-2000 it
grew by 26 per cent,
whereas, during the
same
period, it dropped by 11 percent
globally. It is still on the rise in
Asia. In 2000, amongst the
world's
top
defence-spenders were: Japan (4th), China
(8th), India (11th), and
South Korea (13th).
In
the 1990s Central Asia's defence
spending grew by 21 per cent
to $ 2.4 billion a year,
Eastern
Asia's
by 21 per cent to $ 96 billion a
year, and South Asia's by 50
per cent to $ 15 billion a
year, while
Oceania's
defence spending remained
nearly steady at $ 7.3
billion a year.
How
do emerging defence exporters
like Pakistan penetrate into
the export market and
increase
their
market share?
Suggestion
To
penetrate into traditional
markets, Pakistan should focus on
non-traditional products. There is
a
fairly
large range of these,
including services, combat equipment,
etc. There is a $10 billion to
$15 billion a
year
market for sporting arms,
ammunition, equipment, boots, tents, global
positioning systems
sets,
139
VU
binoculars,
rifles, etc. these are
closely aligned with
military products, but with
lower specifications.
Expanding
into this sector would
energise private-sector defence
industries and draw them
into the
mainstream
of defence exports.
World
Commodity Reports
World
Oil Report
Oil
prices were threatened on the
first anniversary of the September 11,
2001 attack and the
prospect
of a US military invasion on Iraq.
Consequently the prices rose. In
London, the price of Brent
oil
rose
above $29 a barrel briefly on
September 10, for the first
time in almost a year. But
prices fell towards
the
week-end. In New York,
October dated light sweet
crude futures traded at $29.20
from $29.72 a week
earlier.
The
US energy department meanwhile reported
that the crude oil stocks
fell 5.3 million barrels,
or
1.8
per cent, to 293.2 million
in the week ended September 6
from the previous week. Gasoline
stocks
declined
300, 000 barrels to 205.6
million, while the distillate fuel
inventories increased by 4 million
barrels
to
133.6 million.
At
a recent meeting, the Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries agreed to maintain
severe
restraints
on oil production for the
fourth quarter to keep crude
prices from rising.
Opec
left supply limits on hold
despite worries among
consumer nations about the impact of
high
energy
costs on the world economy.
After a meeting in Japan on
September 19, Opec said
that it would
maintain
oil production for rest of
2002 at 21.7 million barrels
per day, aimed at maintaining a
price bank of
$22
to $28 a barrel.
Opec
cutbacks, in place since
January, have combined with the threat of
a US war against Iraq
to
push
the benchmark US crude close to
$30 a barrel a setback for the
industrialized powers trying to
sustain
a shaky economic recovery.
In
early December producers
will meet to review policy
for the first quarter of next
year, by which time
any
US
plans for military action
may be clearer.
An
existing Opec formula, adding more
oil if prices stay above
$28 for the basket, equivalent
to
about
$30.50 for the US crude, for
20 consecutive trading days, could
provide the trigger for more
oil, said
the
UAE oil minister.
Within
the fuel demand rising ahead of the
northern hemisphere winter,
and the United States
pressing
the case against Iraq, fuel
bills may quickly come under
furthered pressure.
World
Gold Report
Dominated
by the concerns of terrorist attacks on
the first anniversary of September 11
and the prospect of a war
on
Iraq,
gold prices had a volatile
week ended September
14.
By
September 13, gold was fixed
at $318.85 an ounce on the London Bullion
market against $319.25 the
previous
week.
World
Coffee Report
Coffee
prices extended recent gains,
pushing up to new one year high points on
technical factors and
speculation of a
possible
reduction in forecasts of the size of
the 2002-03 crop.
On
LIFFE, the Robusta quality
for November delivery
climbed to $533 the previous
week. On New
York's
CSCE
market, the Arabica for December
delivery rose to 56.70 cents the previous
week.
World
Cocoa Report
Cocoa
prices have more than doubled in the
past two years. More
recently they were bolstered by the
prospect that
this
year's
crop will be insufficient to meet demand
for the third year running.
Prices continue to be supported
largely by commercial
buying.
140
VU
Market
Terms
1.
ARBITRAGE
Different
prices may exist in
different markets for the
same commodity at the same time.
A
business
operator takes advantage of difference of
prices and buys from the
market where price is low
and
sells
in a market where price is
high. By this difference of prices he
earns profit.
His
profit mainly depends on two major
factors.
a)
Updated
knowledge of prices prevailing in the
market.
b)
Quick
transport from the place of buying to the
place of selling.
Arbitrage
is quite common in stock Exchange
market where dealers deal in
securities and earn
profit
by the existing difference of prices.
2.
ARRIVAL
Fresh
stock that is brought to the
market in a given period of time is
called arrival. This does
not
include
the old stock or stock on
balance in hand.
Arrivals
show increase in the commodities
and help determine business
trend in the market as
well
as
the price in future. Therefore, large
arrivals indicate rise in prices.
Since it is an important feature
of
market,
it is generally quoted in market
reports.
3.
BEAR
A
stock exchange term derived from
traditional bear hunting,
where the trapper would make
sure
of
his market for the SKINS
before setting out to shoot the
bears.
A
bear is a speculator who
sells at present the commodity/securities
hoping that prices will
fall in
future
and he may earn profit by
the difference of prices.
He
sells commodities/securities that he has
yet to buy. He sells at
present when the price is
high
and
buys in future when the price
falls. This difference of prices
makes his profit.
When
his speculations are proved
wrong, he suffers loss because he
has already sold securities
and
buys
in future at higher rates.
4.
BULL
The
term is related to bull activity.
His lifting the prey is
related to rise in prices
that a bull
speculates.
Bull is a dealer on stock
exchange, buys securities at
present on existing prices. He speculates
rise
in
prices in future. He retains
securities till the time when
there is rise in prices. He
sells in future at higher
rates
and earns profit by the difference of
prices.
When
his speculations are proved
wrong, unlike bear he has a
chance of manipulating prices in
his
favour
and launches Bull Campaign.
So that he may not suffer
loss.
Note:
Both
Bull and Bear help
setting buying or selling
trend in the market.
5.
BEARISH
When
there is a general expectation of fall of
prices in future, Every Bear
invests money in making
selling
contracts. They set a selling
trend in the market and due
to competition among bears the
price level
falls
and the market becomes
BEARISH
The
bearish market reduces the
profit margin and business
operators face difficulty in making
high
profits.
6.
BULLISH
141
VU
When
there is a general expectation of rise in
prices in future, every bull
invests money in
buying
securities/commodities.
This way, they set a buying
trend in the market and face
competition with
other
bulls.
This causes general rise in
prices in the market, and the
market is called Bullish.
The
bullish market increases the
profit margins and sellers
earn huge profits.
The
most notorious of all bull
markets was the SOUTH SEA
BUBBLE, which burst in 1720
and
set
the growth of a credit economy in the
U.K.
7.
BEAR
COVERING
When
bear's speculations are
proved wrong and the
expected prices do not fall
at the time of
buying,
the bear is compelled to buy
goods to fulfil his promises
and obligations. The purchase
made by the
bear
under such conditions is called as
Bear
Covering.
This
happens due to rise in
demand and subsequently the
price level goes up.
8.
BULL
CAMPAIGN
When
bulls' speculations are
proved wrong and the
expected prices do not rise
rather they fall, a
number
of bulls organize themselves to manipulate
prices in their favour. They
create demand by
spreading
RUMOURS
in the market in order to establish
buying trend. The campaign
launched by the bulls is called
BULL
CAMPAIGN.
9.
RIGGING
When
bulls' expectations are
proved wrong and the
expected prices do not rise
rather they fall, he
tries
to manipulate prices in their favour by
bogus transactions. This
activity is called as RIGGING.
He
does so with the help of his
workers, principals and
agents.
10.
SQUARE DEAL
The
sale by the bulls and the purchase by the
bears to settle their
respective accounts is called
as
SQUARE
DEAL.
This
is generally done to finalise the transactions
and close the necessary
accounts.
11.
HEDGING
A
trader buying forward or selling
forward in the commodity exchanges may
hedge to protect
himself
from losses arising from
variations in pricing. He may also
pass on some of his forward
sales to the
shoulders
of others. He does so to save
his skin and the activity is
known as HEDGING.
12.
STAG
Stag
is a person who buys heavily on a
new issue of stocks or
shares and expects that
price will rise
very
quickly; and he will earn
profit.
He
normally holds shares only
for a short time.
13.
DEMURRAGE
The
daily charge made for
detention of a ship beyond the agreed
number of LAY DAYS, is called
Demurrage.
The
term is also used for the daily
charge made for detention of
railway rolling
stock.
14.
DUMPING
In
the modern age of industrialization and
economic development, every country is
anxious to
capture
foreign market for her
own product.
This
may be done, when the first
country wishes to sell at a
low profit or even at a
loss, so that it
may
get hold of the market of the
second country. The first
country may set monopolistic
control and start
earning
profit. This activity is known as
DUMPING.
15.
EX-FACTORY
142
VU
Ex-factory
sale is done outside the factory
and the delivery of goods takes
place at seller's
warehouse
or
godown.
The
price is generally determined by the
following formula. COST +
Direct Expenses +
Owner's
Profit
+ Dealer's Commission = Whole sale
Price.
16.
EX-SHIP
If
the delivery is taken by the buyer at the dock after paying
all cost for their
conveyance home, the
sale
is called Ex-SHIP.
Cost
+ Owner's Profit + Freight +
Insurance + Taxes =
PRICE
The
seller's responsibility ceases as soon as
the goods leave the dock. If barges
(boats) are necessary
the
buyer must provide
them.
17.
LAME DUCK OF THE MARKET
`Lame
duck' is applied to companies which
need to be saved from
complete ruin and this is
done
with
the help of public funds.
`Lame
Ducks' are often hidden under the
cloak of nationalized industries, to
which normal
standard
of efficiency cannot be applied.
18.
GLUT
An
excessive supply of any commodity is
known as Glut.
Excess
of goods in the market makes the
process of selling difficult
and reduces the profit
margin.
If
the situation persists for a longer
period, the market becomes
stagnant.
19.
PEGGLING
When
the rate is artificially maintained at
certain level mainly by manipulation of
prices. It is called
peggling
operation.
Peggling
is generally done by the bulls to maintain price level
and save themselves from
loss.
20.
CLOGGING
It
is a situation when the market is
saturated with surplus funds
which obstruct the normal
operation
of business.
This
situation results in increased
circulation of money within the
country, and causes
inflation.
21.
STRADING
When
the market operators take
advantage of abnormal differences in the
rates of different bills
in
the
same market and carry on
ARBITRAGE operation by selling
one kind of bills to buy
another kind of
bills,
the operation is called STRADING.
22.
BLUE CHIPS
Ordinary
shares which are of the
highest standing considered to be so
safe that there is no risk
of
losing
either capital or income, are
called Blue Chips.
They
are usually the shares of particularly
well-known and sound
companies.
23.
STREET PRICE
When
the stock exchange is closed, the
selling of securities is done outside the
exchange at a
privately
quoted price. This is known
as street price.
The
seller's main objective is to dispose of
his goods whose quality is
not guaranteed. Some
times
he
needs a license for his
business.
143
VU
24.
MARKET PRICE
The
market price is the price
which is actually paid in the current
market dealings. It also
indicates
the
price of every unit of
commodity.
(i.e.,
per unit price).
The
price of a commodity is determined by two
factors i.e., 1, demand 2,
supply.
Therefore,
when the price increases, supply also
increases. Whereas price has
inverse relationship
with
demand.
Market
Price Supply
Market
Price .
25.
MARKET VALUE
Market
value is the price of a commodity which a
dealer expects to get in the
market.
Market
value is based on two
factors:
1.
Depreciation 2. Appreciation.
DEPRECIATION:
It
indicates fall in existing
value.
APPRECIATION:
It
indicates rise in existing
value.
26.
OFF TAKE
It
indicates the total quantity of
goods purchased on an Exchange
during a particular period.
Off
take indicates the Bartar
Transactions. i.e.,
It
includes both ready and
future deliveries.
27.
TURNOVER
Means
the total amount of transactions done in a
day in a particular period is called
TURNOVER.
The
term includes both the sales in
terms of amount or quantity of
goods.
Turnover
= Total goods sold.
Turnover
= Total amount in price.
28.
HAGGLING
It
is a practice of wrangling over price in
which offers and counter - offers are
made at the times of
some
business bargaining.
Haggling
is an important characteristic of the retail
market.
Cost
of goods + Transportation + Profit =
Retail Price.
(After
Haggling)
29.
SET BACK
If
the market suddenly experiences the
effect of low pricing due to
sudden fall in volume
of
transactions,
it is termed as SET
BACK.
It
generally happens after boom in a
market and causes economic
hardships.
This
causes upset in the business
and sellers enter in to a
difficult phase. Here seller
tries to dispose
of
goods at low prices.
30.
FLAT
It
indicates the very low prices of
commodities in a market. It is known as
boom in reverse. This
shows
slump in the market, when
sellers are forced to stop selling
goods, and the market is
closed flat.
31.
BOOM
It
is a period of heavy business
and rising prices.
It
is the point in trade cycle
where an explosive out pouring of
economic activity happens
and
upward
movement is complete.
144
VU
Here,
prices wages, production employment,
and investment are at their
peak.
Though
the whole economic structure
resumes activity, yet it
tends to break suddenly,
when the
government
action is not sufficiently
strong.
Proposal
Certain
analytical reports are called
proposals which include bids to
perform work under a contract and
plea
for
financial support from outsiders.
Such bids and pleas
are almost always format. It
matters a little
weather
your proposal is a memo or a full
document. What does matter
is the structure you apply to
writing
good
proposals.
i.
Professors submit proposal to companies
stating that they can help
solve problems within
a
company
ii.
Advertising agencies bid on being the
agency of record in publicizing a product
or idea for a
client.
iii.
Companies submit proposal to foreign government to do
project.
Purposes
of Proposals
Numerous
groups solicit proposals Governments are
the foremost requesters. These
requests
appear
in newspapers trade publications. Request
for Proposal (RFP) is
directed towards a company
with
specific
expertise. Proposal topic
are varied such as:
·
To
sell property , machines,
etc.
·
To
construct building bridges,
highways
·
To
survey water area for
possible oil fields.
Smaller
Projects are also made
town to individual and
corporation
Improving
engineering and just-in-time
(JIT) performance within a
company
Preparing
managerial staff for work
within or outside the
country
Planning
and basic research before
developing any new
project
Thus
the proposal is similar to that of a recommendation
justification report. Both
aim to solve
problem,
alter a procedure, find answer to
question, offer advice and
training.
Kinds
of Proposal
·
Research
Proposal
·
Business
Proposal
i)
Research Proposal
A
research proposal is usually academic in
nature professors as school
for which the work, desire
to
obtain
grant in response to a request or an
announcement from the government or other
agency. Academic
institutions
submit most research
reports.
ii)
Business Proposal
In
length, proposal may be similar to other
report, short or long and normal.
Like reports proposal
may
be solicited or unsolicited while writing a solicited
business proposal remember you
most likely to have
many
competitors also bidding for
that contract.
Writing
an unsolicited proposal, you need to
convince the reader or review committee
that you
understand
the organization's problem and that
your firm or you are
qualified to solve it
successfully.
145
VU
i)
Prefatory Part
Title
fly
Title
page
Request
for proposal
Letter
of transmitted
Table
of content
List
of illustration
Synopsis
or Executive summary
(Draft
Contract)
ii)
Text parts
Introduction
Body
Summary
iii)
Supplementary parts
Appendixes
The
cover, title fly, title
page, table of contents and
list of illustration are handled to the
same way as in
other
formal report.
Parts
of Proposal
Copy
of REP.
Instead
of a letter of authorization a formal
proposal may have a copy of the request
for proposal a
letter
or memo soliciting a proposal or a bid
for a particular project.
Draft
Contract
In
long proposals a draft contract
may be inserted after an executive
summary. A draft contract
allows
receiver to offer a counter offer
and also gives an immediate
overview, including financial
information.
Table
of Content
Brief
proposal usually don't request a table of
contents. Long proposal do require on as
well as
other
prefatory parts.
ii)
Text parts
Introduction
This
section present and
summarizes the problem you
intend to solve and your
solution to that
problem,
including any benefits the reader
will receive from your
solution. Write introduction as if
you were
approaching
a non-specialist your first
reader may be other then the
person who sent you a
request for
proposal.
Some staff members often give the
proposal an initial reading often the
purpose is stated in
infinitive
form, as for example
To
contract 1 meter carpeted road from
machine shop
To
be printer of the institutes annual
magazine
Scope
Define
the boundaries of your project what
boundaries are you setting
to accomplish your
projects.
(Study
an area of community).
Project
Team
Some
proposal even short include a list of
individuals who well work on
the project, including
project
director.
Background
In
long proposal you may
include
Previous
work
Possibly
literature review on the project
146
VU
Procedures
Here
you briefly explain how you
will meat the requirement of your
reader.
Equipment
and Facilities
Tell
the reader that you have
thought well to realize what facilities
will be needed stat
what
equipments
and facilities you already
have closing. This section
emphasizes the benefits the readers
will
realize
from you solution, and it
urges reader to act.
iii)
Supplementary Parts
Appendix
It
contains materials related to the
report but not include in the
text because they've too
lengthy or
bulky.
SUBJECT:
Activity
Plan, 2006
Our
primary objective for 2006 is to
introduce computers to the three
branches, Sialkot,
Gujranwala
and Jung. Trips are planned
to all these locations
within the next month so we
may see what
each
has accomplished toward this objective.
In addition, I have planned to meet
with Hassan Ahmed,
who
has
written three computer books and he
will, I'm sure, have
valuable ideas for
us.
Specifically,
I've outlined six objectives
in order of priority:
·
Introduce
computers to three of our
branches
·
Complete
the programming here in our corporate
office
·
Reduce
property taxes by Rs. 160,
000
·
Employ
a national management-consulting firm by
September
·
Establish
controls on report reproduction and
reduce costs by Rs.
5,000
·
Improve
the format and detail of financial
analysis provided to corporate each
month
I
look forward to the upcoming year
and progress toward these
goals.
·
SUBJECT:
Supervisory
Skills Training Program
Proposal
·
·
Employee
Development has been conducting an
in-house supervisory course
that focuses
primarily
on
theory and information about
management concepts and
company policies. We would
like to
propose
additional training for
first- and second-line
supervisors, focusing on skills
onlyspecific
behavioral
guidance in supervising and
motivating employees to increase
productivity.
·
·
The
program would be administered with the
help of ABC Consulting, Agency. The
total cost of
Rs
52,000 will cover customized
behavior models, CD-ROM
introductory and practice
sessions, six
line
managers and/or staff certified by
ABC as qualified trainers,
two classes (20 participants
each)
of
trained supervisors, and trainer
manual and participant
workbook for
reproduction.
147
Table of Contents:
|
|||||