Review the existing tuition reimbursement or educational policies and determine if your request falls outside the guidelines. If it does, make some informal inquiries to your manager or human resources partner to determine whether the company has made exceptions to the policy in the past.
Determine who must approve the business case and in what order. Some companies may require that your manager approves the case before you can submit it to the final approver.
Gather financial and educational details about your specific reimbursement request such as the university name, course titles, course start and end dates and tuition fees.
Write the introduction to your business case. This is a summary of what you are requesting, why you are requesting it, the benefits to the organization and the fees and/or resource requirements. Like the entire business case, your introduction should be compelling and generate interest, so that the reader reviews the entire document.
Describe your tuition request in detail. Provide information about the program, the university and the specific courses. Describe the costs and resource requirements involved. Denote whether you will need to adjust your work schedule to attend the college courses.
Describe the employer's return on investment. Indicate how the course work will improve your work performance and benefit the employer. Be specific and quantify the benefits wherever possible.
If appropriate, include alternative solutions. For example, you may want to propose an option that includes fewer courses or requests partial reimbursement.
End the document, with a section titled "next steps." Ask for approval of your business case. Provide a desired approval date and a method to contact you. Thank the reader for considering your tuition request.
Submit a copy of the business case to the appropriate approver(s). Request to meet with the approver(s) to walk them through the business case document.