You are on page 1of 6

Parts of a

Concept Paper
These are the parts of a concept paper.
1. Name or title of the concept
- Give your concept a catchy or interesting name.
2. Introduction
- Introduce the concept briefly. Tell the reader what the project,
research, or feasibility study is all about.
3. Statement of purpose-
- In one sentence, write what your purpose is.
4. Objectives
In bulleted or numbered statements, write what your
objectives are.
Remember to observe the principle of parallelism here.
5. Stakeholders/Beneficiaries
- List who will be involved in the whole process and who will
benefit from it later on.
6. Questions
-Write at least three questions ( not too narrow and not too
broad) that your ideas, if carried out, will answer.
4. Objectives
In bulleted or numbered statements, write what your
objectives are.
Remember to observe the principle of parallelism here.
5. Stakeholders/Beneficiaries
- List who will be involved in the whole process and who will
benefit from it later on.
6. Questions
-Write at least three questions that your idea, if carried out, will
answer.
7. Short description
- Write a short description of your concept. This can
be written in several paragraphs, but try to limit yours
into yours into three or five paragraph.

8. Methodology
-What process are you going to follow to carry out
your concept or idea into complete reality?
9. Timetable
- You can create an illustration, a graph, or a table
that will show the dates or time that you expect a
certain task to be done.
10. Conclusion
- Write a short paragraph and conclude your concept
paper. Your conclusion should emphasize the purpose and
the importance or significance of your big idea in the paper.

You might also like