Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Business studies - Unit 3
- Marketing
- Market research
- Primary Research: First hand research which
has not been published. Collected from
questionnaires, interviews, surveys, etc.
- Secondary Research - Research that has already been
published. e.g.from a website, newspaper, reports, etc.
- Quantitative Data - Factual
information, e.g. Statistics
- Qualitative Data - opinions
and views, e.g. how
something tastes
- A business conducts market research to help identify gaps in
the market and business opportunities.
- Marketing is about responding to consumers'
needs. It is important to find out what these
needs are before launching a new product.
- A market is any place where buyers and sellers
meet to trade or purchase products
- Market Segments - different groups of customers
who share similar characteristics and buying habits
- Competition
- A competitive market has many
businesses trying to win the same
customers.
- Price: If there are several retailers, each retailer will
lower the price in an attempt to win customers.
- Product range: In order to attract and satisfy customers, companies
need to produce products that are superior to their competitors.
- Customer service: Retailers that provide customers
with a helpful and friendly service will win their loyalty.
- Structuring a business
- One method of organisation is to set up departments
covering the four main areas of business activity:
- Finance
- Human resources
- Marketing
- Operations
- Managers need to organise their staff and
keep them motivated
- Key terms:
- Hierarchy - refers to the management levels
within an organisation.
- Line managers - are responsible for
overseeing the work of other staff.
- Subordinates - report to other staff higher up the hierarchy.
Subordinates are accountable to their line manager for their actions.
- Authority - refers to the power managers
have to direct subordinates and make
decisions.
- Delegation - when managers entrust tasks
or decisions to subordinates.
- span of control - measures the number of
subordinates reporting directly to a manager.
- chain of command - the path of authority along which
instructions are passed, from the CEO downwards
- Types of organistaions/ Structures
- Tall organisations have many levels of hierarchy. The span of control
is narrow and there are opportunities for promotion. Lines of
communication are long, making the firm unresponsive to change.
- In centralised organisations, the majority of decisions are taken by
senior managers and then passed down the organisational hierarchy.
- Flat organisations have few levels of hierarchy. Lines of
communication are short, making the firm responsive to
change. A wide span of control means that tasks must be
delegated and managers can feel overstretched.
- Decentralised organisations delegate authority down the chain of
command, thus reducing the speed of decision making.
- Motivation
- Companies need to motivate workers in order to get
them to work harder for them
- Ways to motivate:
- Job enrichment : staff are given more interesting
and challenging tasks.
- Empowerment : staff are given the authority to make
decisions about how they do their job.
- Putting groups of workers in a team who are responsible
together for completing a certain task.
- Fringe benefits: are payments in kind, eg a company car
or staff discounts.
- Increase Pay slightly
- Performance related pay: staff get a bonus
for meeting a target set by their manager.
- Maslows' Hierarchy of needs (above) Explains why people work and if they are given these
things it will motivate them in other ways than pay rise
- Stakeholders
- A stakeholder is anyone with an interest in a business. Stakeholders are individuals, groups or
organisations that are affected by the activity of the business.
- Examples
- Owners who are interested in how much profit the business makes.
- Customers who want the business to produce quality
products at reasonable prices.
- Managers who are concerned about their salary.
- Workers who want to earn high wages and keep their jobs.
- Lenders who want to be repaid on time and in full.
- Internal stakeholders are groups within a business - eg owners and workers.
External stakeholders are groups outside a business - eg the community.
- Ethics
- Working ethically means acting in ways that are
both fair and honest.
- Ethical firms also carefully consider the implications of what they are
doing and the effect it might have on the community and the environment.
- Ethical behaviour requires firms to act in ways that
stakeholders consider to be both fair and honest
- Many owners believe that acting ethically increases costs and so
reduces profits. e.g. child labour reduces costs but is unethical.
- Pressure groups are organisations set up to try to influence what
we think about the business and its environment.
- A pressure group can challenge and even change the
behaviour of a business by:
- running
campaigns
- organising marches
- contacting the press
- writing letters to MPs