Advisory Report
When advising in back-end development, it is crucial to substantiate recommendations with facts, data, or insights from previous phases. You must support your choices with, for example, research results, test data, best practices, or theory.
In addition to what you advise, how you present it on paper is also important. You must be able to write a clearly structured advice report, in which the problem, analysis data, options, and final advice are presented clearly. This written skill means that you build your advice logically (introduction with context, analysis results, comparison of options, recommendation, and conclusion) and avoid or explain jargon.
In the context of back-end development, this could be a document for a client or team, in which you recommend a particular technological choice with all underlying arguments. The advice report must also be understandable for the target audience (e.g., manager versus programmer) and to-the-point.
Starting Points
Key Points
- Use a logical structure: start with context and problem statement, then present analysis/alternatives, and end with a clear recommendation.
- Base your advice on concrete findings (figures, research, examples) and explicitly refer to them in your justification.
- Alternatives are substantiated and the pros and cons per alternative are clear.
- Write clearly and concisely; avoid unnecessary jargon and long, woolly texts.
- Check if the document is tailored to the reader.
- Ensure your advice document is visually clear (use headings, lists, possibly diagrams) so the reader can quickly understand the core.
Page Info
- Version 1.0
- Last updated: 30.09.2025
- Updated by: GS