1.1 what is a business Flashcards
a business aims to
meet the needs and wants of individuals or organisations through any of the following of the following activities:
- producing crops extracting raw materials from earth
- creating a product
- providing a service
resource inputs processed to generate the desired output
- human (the right quality and quantity of people required to make a product or provide the service
- physical (the right quality and quantity of materials, machinery and land space required to make the product or service
- financial (the right quantity of cash and other forms of finance required to make the profit or service)
- enterprise (the least tangible input but crucially important for a business. It is the business idea and determination to turn that idea into a functioning and ideally, a thriving business)
production processes to add value can take many forms
- capital-intensive processes use a large proportion of land or machinery relative to other inputs, especially labour
- labour intensive processes use a large proportion of labour relative to other inputs, especially in relation to land or machinery
primary sector
part of the economy engaged in extraction (such as minerals or oil) or production of raw materials (farming, fishing, forestry, raising livestock, and quarrying)
secondary sector
part of the economy engaged in the production of finished goods (ie the manufacturing sector of the economy)
tertiary sector
the part of the economy engaged in the delivery of services, such as banking, healthcare, and restaurants
quaternary sector
the part of the economy engaged in the production, processing and transmission of information
chain of production
is the steps through the different sectors that have to occur in order to raw materials into a consumer good that is marketed
reasons for starting up a business or an enterprise
- rewards
- independence
- necessity
- challenge
- interest
- finding a gap
- sharing an idea
steps for start ups
- Organising the basics
- Researching the market
- Planning the business
- Establishing legal requirements
- Raising the finance
- Testing the market
two features that are common to all successful start ups
- the business idea
- planning
what does the business idea refer to
to the fundamental activity that the business will do, whether it is something basic (such as cleaning) or something more sophisticated (manufacturing)
can be market driven - determined by the needs or product - or service driven, which means that in some sense the business must convince others that the product or service is worth purchasing
reasons why start ups fail
- organization (poor location, unreliable supplies, business structures failed)
- market research (poor market research, inappropriate target market, test was too optimistic, weak channels of communication)
- business plan (plan did not convince, goals were too vague or contradictory)
- legal requirements (labour laws were not addressed, difficult registration, tax obligations not addressed)
- finance (accounts not kept properly, raising start up capital was too difficult, raising medium term to long term finance was difficult
- the market (launch failed, pilot was inconclusive, product failed to inspire)