Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

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Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Article

How Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) can help you reduce risk of churn
Read more

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

Article

What to include in your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Article

5 reasons Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) are essential for B2B enterprises
Read more

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

Article

What to include in your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Article

How Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) can help you reduce risk of churn
Read more

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

Article

What to include in your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Article

How Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) can help you reduce risk of churn
Read more

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

Article

What to include in your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Article

5 reasons Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) are essential for B2B enterprises
Read more

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

Article

What to include in your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Article

How Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) can help you reduce risk of churn
Read more

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

Article

What to include in your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Article

How Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) can help you reduce risk of churn
Read more

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

Article

What to include in your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Article

How Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) can help you reduce risk of churn
Read more

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

Article

What to include in your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Article

How Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) can help you reduce risk of churn
Read more

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

Article

What to include in your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Article

How Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) can help you reduce risk of churn
Read more

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

Article

What to include in your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Article

How Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) can help you reduce risk of churn
Read more

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

Article

What to include in your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Article

How Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) can help you reduce risk of churn
Read more

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

Article

What to include in your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

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3 questions to ask to optimise your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

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5 reasons Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) are essential for B2B enterprises
Read more

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Article

Why you need to run Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

How Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) can help you reduce risk of churn
Read more

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

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5 ways to optimise your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) meetings
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3 questions to ask to optimise your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

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3 easy steps to personalise your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
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Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Article

How Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) can help you reduce risk of churn
Read more

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

Article

What to include in your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Article

How Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) can help you reduce risk of churn
Read more

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

Article

What to include in your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Article

How Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) can help you reduce risk of churn
Read more

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

Article

What to include in your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Article

5 reasons Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) are essential for B2B enterprises
Read more

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

Article

What to include in your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Article

5 reasons Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) are essential for B2B enterprises
Read more

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

Article

What to include in your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Article

How Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) can help you reduce risk of churn
Read more

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

Article

What to include in your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Article

5 reasons Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) are essential for B2B enterprises
Read more

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

Article

What to include in your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Article

How Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) can help you reduce risk of churn
Read more

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

Article

What to include in your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Article

5 reasons Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) are essential for B2B enterprises
Read more

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

Article

What to include in your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Article

5 reasons Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) are essential for B2B enterprises
Read more

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

Article

What to include in your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Article

Why you need to run Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

How Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) can help you reduce risk of churn
Read more

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Article

5 ways to optimise your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) meetings
Read more

Article

3 questions to ask to optimise your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

3 easy steps to personalise your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

Article

3 questions to ask to optimise your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

5 reasons Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) are essential for B2B enterprises
Read more

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Article

Why you need to run Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

How Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) can help you reduce risk of churn
Read more

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Article

5 ways to optimise your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) meetings
Read more

Article

3 questions to ask to optimise your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

3 easy steps to personalise your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Article

How Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) can help you reduce risk of churn
Read more

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

Article

What to include in your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Article

5 reasons Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) are essential for B2B enterprises
Read more

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

Article

What to include in your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

Article

3 questions to ask to optimise your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

5 reasons Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) are essential for B2B enterprises
Read more

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Article

Why you need to run Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

How Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) can help you reduce risk of churn
Read more

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Article

5 ways to optimise your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) meetings
Read more

Article

3 questions to ask to optimise your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

3 easy steps to personalise your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Article

How Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) can help you reduce risk of churn
Read more

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

Article

What to include in your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Article

5 reasons Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) are essential for B2B enterprises
Read more

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

Article

What to include in your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

Article

3 questions to ask to optimise your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

5 reasons Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) are essential for B2B enterprises
Read more

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Article

Why you need to run Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

How Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) can help you reduce risk of churn
Read more

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Article

5 ways to optimise your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) meetings
Read more

Article

3 questions to ask to optimise your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

3 easy steps to personalise your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Article

How Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) can help you reduce risk of churn
Read more

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

Article

What to include in your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

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How Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) can help you reduce risk of churn
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Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
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What to include in your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
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Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

Article

Why you need to run Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

What to include in your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

White paper

Think your customers are happy?
Get the eBook

Article

Why you need to run Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

White paper

Think your customers are happy?
Get the eBook

Article

Why you need to run Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

Infographic

Five ways Quarterly Business Reviews impact retention and growth
Open now

Article

How to create an engaging Quarterly Business Review (QBR)

Your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) needs to appeal to a wide range of stakeholders. But how do you engage all of these different people and get their buy-in?

A common challenge with Quarterly Business Reviews is that stakeholders lack the necessary incitement to read them. This can happen when stakeholders don’t appreciate the benefits a high-quality Business Review brings them. So, how do we prevent understandably busy contacts from simply skimming your QBR content? 

 

Prepare in full

 

Talk to your stakeholders. Get ahead in discussing the upcoming QBR with your stakeholders and make sure they are made aware of what it will cover.

Incorporate feedback.  Take the opportunity to ask what they would like to see in relation to their needs and previous QBRs. Make sure to let them know that their points will be addressed in the review. 

Prepare for your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) in full

 

Tailor the content

 

Segment reports. Different stakeholders will have different interests. Create tailored sections or content within the QBR for your different stakeholder groups, focusing on the most relevant information for each.

Highlight specific interests. Emphasise the aspects of the business that directly impact or interest the stakeholders in question.

 

Optimise the presentation

 

Create a compelling executive summary. Provide a concise overview alongside clear highlights. Start with a brief summary of the most important findings, key metrics and actionable insights.

Use visual aids. Graphs and charts are great tools to highlight certain key metrics and trends, but be careful not to overload your audience! Product drawings and pictures of your team will also give your reader microbreaks from processing text and data.

Keep it varied. You want a good balance between text, visuals and data to keep the reader engaged. Think of it as a magazine, you are not just providing information for your stakeholder to absorb; you are packaging it and presenting it to them.

Multiple formats. Provide the QBR in various formats, such as PDFs, online portals, and mobile-friendly versions, to ensure easy access. Some stakeholders will still prefer a printed version, so make sure to provide one if possible.

Interactive elements. Digital formats provide the opportunity to involve the user through interaction. Use clickable summaries, navigation menus, or embedded links, to allow stakeholders to explore sections in detail as needed.

Multimedia. Incorporate videos, clickable galleries or audio summaries from key leaders to add a personal touch and highlight important points.

 

Personalise the experience

 

Direct delivery. Send personalised emails to stakeholders with a brief summary and a direct link to the full QBR. If you have an in-person meeting scheduled, take the opportunity to deliver any physical version or summary you may have in person.

One-on-one briefings. Offer to discuss the review directly with key stakeholders to address any questions and to highlight specific key findings.

Personalise your stakeholders' Quarterly Business review (QBR) experience

 

Final thoughts

 

Your QBR isn’t just a compilation of data, it is the way you tell your stakeholders what you have been up to and how it’s going. If you want to get the message through, you need to make it compelling and engaging. In other words: don’t bore them!
By reviewing the tips above and implementing those that will work well for your business, you will greatly improve the appeal and, by extension, the reach of your QBRs.

 

Article by Loke Rivano Wagelin, Copywriter

 

Read more:

Link to Clientshare's research into the impacts of poor-quality Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs) on revenue, relationships and retention

Link to an article outlining how to solve common Business Review challenges

Link to an article explaining five ways Clientshare Pulse uncovers growth opportunities for enterprises. 

 

Related resources

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3 easy steps to personalise your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

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5 ways to optimise your Quarterly Business Review (QBR) meetings
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Article

What to include in your Quarterly Business Reviews (QBRs)
Read more

"Engaged and satisfied customers buy 50% more frequently, spend 200% more each year and are five times more likely to display brand loyalty"

- Gartner, KPMG Nunwood
QBR discussion guide

Download our research whitepaper, 'The QBR Delusion'

We interviewed hundreds of buyers of Logistics, FM, Contract Catering, IT, RPO and BPO services from the UK and US. The research uncovers an undeniable feeling among buyers that their suppliers need to start delivering better QBRs if they want to keep their business. Learn more about how your customers think you're losing out on key opportunities with them today.