Write an analysis of Cash Flow and Liquidity Management during Covid/Pandemic on 2-3 Big UK FirmsUse financial ratios, taxation analysis, financial statement analysis, quarterly reports, annual reports, working capital, mean tests, comparisons between companies etc Compare the effects of the financial crisis 2008 vs Covid 19 Use articles and academic research Breakdown Title Page This should be centred on the page with the main title in upper case. Any longer sub-title should be in lower case. Put your student number to the bottom right. [The reports should be anonymous]. Acknowledgements These are not essential but can be useful for recording organisational help. Abstract This is a brief statement of what the project report contains. It should have a statement of what you set out to do, what you did, what you concluded and what you recommended. Busy managers often only read the title and abstract of a report so it is a key part of your work. You cannot write the abstract until all the work is finished. Contents page This should be your table of contents showing the section titles and the subsections (indented) against page numbers. As in the text, the former can be underlined and in bold. Introduction Briefly give a background to your project report, why the topic is of importance to others and why it is of interest to you. Make a clear statement of your project objective and headline issue or argument and the type of analysis you propose to carry out. Literature review Write a review of the main body of published work. This acts to set out your project in the context of existing knowledge. The Literature review provides a critical insight, especially to a new reader, into current thinking around your topic of interest. You need to demonstrate a broad range of references majoring on academic articles (journals). These sources may also be supported by textbooks, web references, newspapers and professional magazines. Case selection, Data and Analysis Methods This section should provide sufficient detail about how the case is selected, with full justification and identification of how an analysis of the case would make a meaningful contribution. The section also need to explain how the data is identified and collected. For the purpose of this module, the data is normally of secondary nature and could be collected through company reports, company websites, government, NGOs and professional databases, or from other published sources. You should clearly cite the sources of the data and are able to critically comment on the validity and reliability of the data. Analysis This section should include the results of your data analysis. You need to present and analyse the data. Ensure your analysis addresses the issue and reflects the project objectives. The data needs to be presented clearly with a title to each table/chart and then a small amount of commentary for non-numerical readers! Discussion You also need to make sense of the overall findings presented in your analysis section. Interpret the data critically. You can do this by: drawing together specific themes; making comparisons with relevant research, as well linking and integrating with the literature that you have referred to earlier in your Project report. Other aspects to consider are: to what extent have you provided some answers to your questions, how generalisable are the answers to other organisations/populations and what are the implications for business practice? Be self-critical about any shortcomings you may have about your chosen methodology e.g. sampling, breadth and depth of findings, validity and reliability issues. The section summarizes the relationships between your findings and the existing body of knowledge. You need to summarise the key points of your investigation and demonstrate how they addressed the project objectives. If appropriate, suggest further research in the area but avoid introducing new material as this would be a new finding. Conclusions & implications Whilst the conclusions are derived from your analysis, the implications may include your own recommendations for practice and may reflect your own opinions on for instance what the organisation(s) should do next or how the findings should be embedded in organisational practice. References (not included in the word count) Harvard References provide details of the reading materials you used and noted in the text of your project report. A quick guide to tutors for the potential quality of a project report is to look first at the references to see how extensive the list is. The list needs to be in alphabetical order and follow the Harvard system of referencing.