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AS business - chapters 1 and 2


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[Front]


the purpose of business activity
[Back]


uses resources to meet the needs of customers by providing a product or service that they demand. Uses scarce resources to produce goods and services allowing us to have a higher quality of life compared to if we remained entirely self sufficient

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AS business - chapters 1 and 2 - Marcador

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AS business - chapters 1 and 2 - Detalles

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The purpose of business activity
Uses resources to meet the needs of customers by providing a product or service that they demand. Uses scarce resources to produce goods and services allowing us to have a higher quality of life compared to if we remained entirely self sufficient
4 factors of production
Land, labour, capital, enterprise
Land
This general term includes not only land itself but all the renewable and non renewable resources of nature such as coal, crude oil and timber
Labour
Manual and skilled labour make up the workforce of the business
Capital
This is not just the finance needed to set up a business and pay for its continuing operations but also all the manufactured resources used in production such as capital goods like computers factories etc
Enterprise
The initiative and coordination provided by entrepreneurs. they combine the other factors of production into a unit capable of producing goods and services. enterprise provides the managing, decision making and coordinating roles
Adding value
Increasing the difference between the cost of bought in inputs (materials) and the selling price of finished goods
Economic problem
There are insufficient goods to satisfy all of our needs and wants at any one time
Purpose of economic activity and the problem of choice
Provide for as many of our wants as possible, if we make the right choice of what to get we will choose this things that give us the greatest benefit leaving out those things that provide less value to us
NA
NA
Opportunity cost
The next most desired option that is given up
Changes in the business environment
New competitors - entering the market legal changes - like safety regulations or limits on who can buy the product economic changes - that leave customers with less money to spend technological changes - that make the products or processes of the new business outdated
Why do some businesses succeed
Good understanding of customer needs - leads to sales targets being achieved efficient management of operations - keeps costs under control flexible decision making to adapt to new situations - allows investment in new business opportunities appropriate and sufficient sources of finance - prevents cash shortages and allows for expansion
Why do some businesses fail
Poor recording keeping, lack of cash, poor management skills
How to improve poor record keeping
Keep hold of paper records like receipts from suppliers or details of big deliveries. They’re a good backup if a computer stops working and provided evidence to tax authorities of business activity
How cash flow problems can be reduced
- cash flow forecast is made and kept up to date - good relationship with the banks so cash problems can be financed with an overdraft extension - make sure customers with credit pay on time
How to improve poor management skills
Get management experience through employment, get a five and training from a specialist organisation, employ people with management experience but expensive so new formed business cannot afford
Local business
Operate in small well defined parts of a country. owners often don’t aim to expand so don’t try get countrywide attention. generally small businesses like hairdressing
National business
Have branches or operations across a country. don’t try establish operations in other countries or sell internationally. like a small retail shop
Multinational business
A business organisation that has it’s headquarters in one country but with operating branches, factories and assembly plants in other countries
Entrepreneur
An individual who has the idea for a new business, starts it up and carries most of the risk but benefits from rewards
Intrapreneur
A business employee who takes direct responsibility for turning an idea into a profitable new product or business venture
Qualities of an entrepreneur
Leadership skills - if the business has employees, the entrepreneur must lead by example and will have to have a personality that encourages and motivates workers risk taking - must be willing to take risks, normally with investing savings self-confident - have belief in themselves and their ides that they would bounce back from setback also get money
The role of intrapreneurship in the ongoing success of a business
Encouraging people to stay - don't have to leave to be an entrepreneur competitive advantage - more innovative products more innovation - increase sales or exciting ways to sell existing products
Barriers to entrepreneurship
Lack of a customer base, obtaining finance, lack of business opportunity, competition
Business risk and uncertainty
Can reduce risk by studying why other ones failed to avoid making the same mistakes
The role of business enterprise in the development of a country
Employment creation, economic growth, exports if expand
Business plans definition
A written document that describes a business, the objectives, its strategies, the market it is in and its financial forecasts
Elements of a business plan
Executive summary - overview of the new business and its strategies operations - premises to be used, production facilities, IT systems financial forecasts - the future projections of sales, profit and cash flow for at least one year ahead
Advantages of a business plan
Forces owner to think about its strengths and any potential weaknesses, gives owner a clear plan of action t guide actins and decisions in early stages of the business
Disadvantages of a business plan
Can create a false sense of security, if plan is not detailed and has evidence from market research then investors can delay making a finance decision
Primary sector
Firms engaged in farming, fishing, oil extraction and all other industries that extract natural resources so that they can be used and processed
Secondary sector
Firms that manufacture and process products from natural resources including computers, brewing, baking, clothes-making and construction
Tertiary sector
Firms providing services to consumer and other business such as retailing, transport, insurance, banking, hotels and tourism
Quaternary sector
Businesses providing information services such as computing, web design, management consultancy
Advantages of industrialisation
Total national output increases which raises standard of living, increasing output of goods can result in lower imports and higher exports of such products, expanding and profitable firms will pay more tax to the government
Disadvantages of industrialisation
Increased job can cause influx of people to towns causing housing issues, imports of raw materials needed increasing import costs, the multinationals' expansion can have negative consequences
Impacts of deindustrialisation
Job losses, job opportunities in service sectors, increased need for retraining programmes
Public sector
Organisations accountable to and controlled by central or local government
Private sector
Businesses owned and controlled by individuals or groups of individuals
Sole trader
A business in which one person provides the permanent finance and in return has full control of the business and is able to keep all the profits
Sole trader advantages
Easy to set up, 100% control, profits, close personal relationships, business based on interests or skills of the owners
Sole trader disadvantages
Unlimited liability, often faces intense competition, owners unable to specialise in areas of the business that are most interested in, difficult to raise capital, long hours, lack of continuity
Partnership
A business formed by 2 or more people to carry on a business together with shared capital investment and usually shared responsibility
Partnership advantages
Greater access to capital, shared responsibility, greater opportunity for specialisation, easy to set up, shared decision-making, shared losses
Partnership disadvantages
Unlimited liability, profits are shared, no continuity, all partners are bound to decisions made by any of them, potential for conflict
Private limited company
A business that is owned by shareholders who are often members of the same family, the company cannot sell shares to the general public
Private limited company advantages
Shareholders have limited liability, original owner is still often able to regain control, company has a separate legal personality
Private limited company disadvantages
Lots of legal formalities, difficult for shareholders to sell shares, capital cannot be raised by the sale of shares to the general public
Public limited company
A company whose shares are traded on a stock exchange and can be bought and sold by the public
Public limited company advantages
Shareholders have limited liability, the company has a separate legal identity, easy for shareholders to buy and sell shares