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nature of business

1.

Business

An organised effort of individuals to produce and sell goods and services for profit to satisfy needs and wants

2.

Goods

Tangible products that can be seen or touched (e.g. food clothing electronics)

3.

Services

Intangible activities provided to customers (e.g. hairdressing banking)

4.

Profit

Financial reward gained when revenue is greater than expenses

5.

Profit Formula

Profit = Revenue − Expenses

6.

Employment

Businesses provide jobs and income for people in the economy

7.

Income

Money earned by individuals through work or business ownership

8.

Wages

Payment made to employees based on hourly work

9.

Salary

Fixed annual payment to employees

10.

Commission

Payment based on a percentage of sales made

11.

Bonus

Extra payment given as a reward for good performance

12.

Fringe Benefits

Non-cash benefits given to employees such as company cars or discounts

13.

Dividend

A share of profit paid to shareholders of a company

14.

Choice

Competition between businesses gives consumers more variety and options

15.

Innovation

The process of improving or creating new products or services

16.

Research and Development (R&D)

Activities businesses undertake to develop new products or improve existing ones

17.

Entrepreneur

A person who starts and runs a business and takes financial risks

18.

Risk

The possibility that a business may lose money

19.

Wealth

The total value of goods services and assets produced in an economy

20.

Quality of Life

The overall standard of living and wellbeing of individuals in society

21.

Micro Business

A business with fewer than 5 employees

22.

Small Business

A business with 5–19 employees

23.

Medium Business

A business with 20–199 employees

24.

Large Business

A business with 200 or more employees

25.

SME (Small to Medium Enterprise)

A business with fewer than 200 employees

26.

Local Business

A business that operates in a small geographic area

27.

National Business

A business that operates across one country

28.

Global Business

A business that operates in multiple countries around the world

29.

Primary Industry

Industry involved in extracting natural resources (e.g. mining farming)

30.

Secondary Industry

Industry involved in manufacturing goods from raw materials

31.

Tertiary Industry

Industry that provides services to consumers and businesses

32.

Quaternary Industry

Industry based on knowledge and information services such as IT and research

33.

Quinary Industry

Industry providing domestic or personal services such as childcare and hospitality

34.

Unincorporated Business

A business where the owner and business are legally the same

35.

Incorporated Business

A business that is a separate legal entity from its owners

36.

Unlimited Liability

The owner is personally responsible for all business debts

37.

Limited Liability

The owners are only responsible for debts up to the amount they invested

38.

Sole Trader

A business owned and operated by one person

39.

Sole Trader Advantage

Easy to start full control keeps all profit

40.

Sole Trader Disadvantage

Unlimited liability and limited access to capital

41.

Partnership

A business owned by 2–20 people who share profits and responsibilities

42.

Partnership Advantage

Shared responsibility and more capital

43.

Partnership Disadvantage

Unlimited liability and possible disagreements

44.

Private Company (Pty Ltd)

A company owned by shareholders but not listed on the stock exchange

45.

Public Company (Ltd)

A company that sells shares to the public on the stock exchange

46.

External Influences

Factors outside the business that cannot be controlled but affect operations

47.

Internal Influences

Factors inside the business that management can control

48.

Economic Influence

Factors such as inflation unemployment interest rates and economic growth

49.

Financial Influence

The availability of finance such as loans or investment capital

50.

Geographic Influence

Physical location factors such as climate distance and natural resources

51.

Social Influence

Changes in society’s values attitudes and lifestyles

52.

Legal Influence

Laws and regulations businesses must follow

53.

Political Influence

Government policies that affect businesses

54.

Institutional Influence

The impact of organisations such as regulators or unions

55.

Technological Influence

Advances in technology that affect how businesses operate

56.

Competitive Situation

The level of competition between businesses in a market

57.

Product

The goods or services a business sells

58.

Location

The physical place where a business operates

59.

Resources

Inputs used by businesses including human physical financial and information resources

60.

Management

The process of planning organising leading and controlling resources

61.

Business Culture

The shared values beliefs and behaviours within a business

62.

Stakeholders

Individuals or groups with an interest in a business’s activities

63.

Internal Stakeholders

Stakeholders inside the business such as owners managers and employees

64.

External Stakeholders

Stakeholders outside the business such as customers suppliers and government

65.

Business Life Cycle

The stages a business goes through from start-up to decline

66.

Establishment Stage

The stage where the business begins operations and faces high costs and low sales

67.

Growth Stage

The stage where sales increase and the business expands

68.

Maturity Stage

The stage where growth slows and competition increases

69.

Post-Maturity Stage

The stage where the business may renew remain stable or decline

70.

Business Decline

A decrease in sales profits or market share

71.

Voluntary Cessation

When the owner chooses to close the business

72.

Involuntary Cessation

When creditors force a business to close

73.

Bankruptcy

A legal process where individuals cannot repay debts

74.

Voluntary Administration

An external administrator is appointed to attempt to save the company

75.

Liquidation

The process of selling a company’s assets to repay creditors