Zusammenfassung der Ressource
The Role of Business
- The Role of Business
- Factors of Production
- Land - natural resources of the world; land, water, air and plants
- Labour - The people employed by the business
- Capital - man-made resources needed to make a product/service.
- Enterprise - Combining all factors at the hands of an entrepeneur
- Sectors of Industry
- Primary - work with raw materials
- Secondary - use raw materials to make a consumer product
- Teritary - Provide a service
- Types of Business Organisations
- Private
- Sole traders
- Advantages
- Small and easy to set up business
- All profits retained by owner
- The owner can choose when to work and when to take holidays
- All decisions made solely by owner
- Disadvantages
- Nobody to share workload and responsibility with
- Hard to raise capital
- Unlimited liability
- Hard to achieve economies of scale
- Partnerships
- Advantages
- Workload and responsibility is shared
- Different partners offer different experience and skills
- Finance raised more easliy
- Customers and Suppliers might see a partnership as more trustworthy to deal with
- Disadvantages
- Profit is split
- Unlimited liability for each partner
- Arguments could slow decision making
- Legal profit-splitting document must be created
- Private Limited Companies
- Run by a board of directors who may or may not
own shares. Business is owned by shareholders
who all own a small piece of the company and in
return receive dividends or a share of the profits.
- Advantages
- Limited liability for shareholders - they will only lose the money
they have invested into the business.
- Finance easily raised by selling shares
- Shareholders and directors can bring different experience and skills
- Disadvantages
- More complicated to set up, complex legal process involved.
- Rules laid down by the law, The Companies Act, have to be followed.
- Financial accounts must be published showing their
annual financial position
- Setting up cost can be high.
- Public
- National Government
- UK Parliament
- Scottish Government
- Manages the finance of Scotland and organises Local Government
Organisations to follow budgets set by MSPs in the UK parliament
- Decides where taxes are going to be spent and allocates budgets
- Local Government Organisations
- Made up of local elected councillors decide what to do with their budgets
- Third
- Non-profit organisations
- Charities and voluntary organisations set up to support specific causes. They are
regulated by the government and their income is put towards a specific cause.
- E.g. The RSPCA uses its income to prevent animal cruelty and to promote animal welfare
- Social enterprises
- Have a main social or environmental aim which they stick to.
- Run like a business and at least 50% of their profits are invested into
their aim. Because of this they do not rely on on grants and donations
- E.g. the Big Issue
- Customer Satisfaction
- Providing the highest possible quality product
- A good quality product will impress the customer leading to satifsfaction
- Making sure employees are properly trained
- Employees who are knowledgeable are trained to deal with customers will improve customer satisfaction
- Having a customer care strategy
- Lets customers know the level of service that they will be provided and how complaints will be dealt with
- Having a customer complaints procedure
- Allows customer problems and complaints to be handled in the best way possible
- Having an after-sales service
- Gives customers the opportunity to ask questions about their recent purchase
- Objectives
- Survival
- Ensuring the business makes enough profit to cover its costs.
- Profit
- Maximising the money the business makes
- Provision of a service
- To provide people with a service they want
- Customer satisfaction
- To make customers happy to encourage repeat purchases
- Enterprise
- Satisfying customer needs and wants by combining resources to create a worthy product