business unit 1
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buss 1 powerpointTRANSCRIPT
BUSINESS STUDIESUNIT 1
ENTERPRISE AND ENTREPRENEURSCharacteristics of successful entrepreneurs-Passionate (about the product)
-Visionary (have faith)
-Energetic and driven(prepared to work hard)
-Calculated risk taker (take risk to maximise rewards)
-Multi-tasker (take on more than one role)
-Resilient (able to handle problems)
-Focused(set clear goals)
-Results orientated(take pleasure from achieving targets)
ENTERPRISE AND ENTREPRENEURS
Reasons for Starting a business-More flexibility over working life
-Escape an uninteresting job
-Pursue an interest
-Want to be your own boss
-Feeling of satisfaction
-Wanting more of the rewards from your effort
-Fed up of working un a business hierarchy
-Financial necessity
ENTERPRISE AND ENTREPRENEURS
Risks of starting a business-Potential loss of investments
-Loss of pay from previous job
-Potential unlimited liability
-Stress and pressure
-Earning little
-isolation
Rewards for the Entrepreneur-Potential for income and profit
-Satisfaction
-Freedom
-Control
-Capital Gain
ENTERPRISE AND ENTREPRENEURS
Sources of Government SupportThe government are encouraging start-ups for economic growth
-BIS (Dept for Business, Innovation and Skills)
-Business Link
-DirectGov (advice on tax, laws and regulations)
-UKTI (help with international sales)
-Tax incentives or breaks for investment
Other Support and Advice for Start-ups-Many online sources
-Business Associations (the Princes Trust and Federation of small businesses)
-Local business networks
-Professional Firms (Accountants and Lawyers)
-Campaigning Organisations (start-up Britain)
OPPORTUNITY COSTOpportunity Cost- is the cost of missing out on the next best alternative. The benefits that could have been gained by taking a different decision.
How opportunity costs affect the startup:
- Resources are limited
- Decisions need to be made when resources are scarce
- Take calculated risks and weigh up potential implications before choosing what they think is best for the business.
GENERATING AND PROTECTING IDEAS
Sources of ideas- Brainstorming and creative thinking
- Business/ Personal Experience
- Frustrations with poor service
- Copying an existing idea (Franchising)
- Innovation or invention
What makes a good Idea?- Solving a problem
- Cheaper or better product/service
- Easier to use
- Can be developed easily
- exploits gap in the market or an emerging growth trend
GENERATING AND PROTECTING IDEASPatents- Difficult to obtain
- On a new invention or innovative product or production method
- The patent owner is given up to 20 years protection against competitors
- Ability to license right to use the invention in return for royalties
- Patents are expensive and time consuming to obtain
Trademarks- Identifies a product
- Can be a name, logo or symbol etc.
- Trademark allows a business from using identical or confusingly similar marks
- Trademark protection lasts for 10 years
Copyright- Important source of protection for any startup in creative or knowledge industries
- Protection is granted automatically
- Protects the way in which an idea is expressed as soon as it is published
- Lasts for 70 years after authors death
ADDING VALUE AND TARGETING A NICHE MARKET
Added value – is the difference between the price of the finished product and the cost of the inputs used in making it.
How to add value:
- Delivering excellent and distinctive customer service
- Building a distinctive brand
- Product features and benefits
Why add value?
- Can charge higher price
- Differentiate from competition
- Build customer loyalty
- Focus on customer needs
ADDING VALUE AND TARGETING A NICHE MARKET
Niche Market- is a smaller, specialist part of a larger market where customers have particular needs and wants.Market Segments:
- Geographic (countries, regions and population)
- Demographic (customer age, gender, lifestyle etc)
Advantages of niche segments:
- Better able to add value
- Customer needs are more precisely defined
- Potential to charger higher prices
- Encounter less competition
- Target potential customers easier
Disadvantages of niche segments:
- Customers are more demanding
- Existing established competitors
- Less able to benefit economies of scale
- Competitors soon attracted when market becomes mainstream
FRANCHISINGFranchise- the business format which a franchisor allows a franchisee to use, under license.
Franchisor- the ultimate owner of the franchise format
Franchisee- the business who is granted the right to operate a franchise on behalf of the franchisor.
Costs of being a franchisee:
- Initial cost
- Service fee
- Advertising levy
- Mark ups
Franchisees can be seen as a lower risk:
- Easier to gain customers
- Tried and tested business model
- Easier to raise bank finance
FRANCHISINGADVANTAGES DISADVANTAGES
FRANCHISEE
- It is your own business- Business format is well thought- Ongoing advice and support from the
franchisor- Should be running a business with a
reputation and brand name- Don’t necessarily need experience- Benefit from franchisors scale
- You don’t own the business format- Expected to act in the best interests
of the franchisor- Restrictions on trading (prices and
location)- Large proportion of revenues go to
the franchisor- Risk of the franchisor of going out of
business
FRANCHISOR
- Relatively quick method of expansion
- Lower investment needed- Regular fees and levies provide a
strong flow of income.
- Franchisees profit from the franchisors business model.
- Poor franchisee can damage reputation of whole franchise
- Need robust franchisee recruitment and management systems.
ANALYSING AND UNDERSTANDING THE MARKET
A market is any location where buyers and sellers come together to transact with each other.
Local Markets:
+ Customers are a short distance from suppliers
+ Close to the customers and respond to market change
- Market is small and often competitive
National Markets:
+ Much larger target market
- Customers are spread throughout the country
- Needs to be operated efficiently and hard to maintain
Physical markets:
+ Buyers and sellers meet in the same location(eg car boot sale)
+ Easier for buyers and sellers to exchange information
- Needs to be open for trade to take place
Electronic Market
+ Any connection between buyer and seller using electronic means
+ Ability to reach global market
- Price is highly competitive
- Product then has to be delivered
ANALYSING AND UNDERSTANDING THE MARKET
Demand is how much customers are prepared and willing to buy a product at a given price.
Factors that affect demand:
- Price
- Incomes (how much money the customer has to spend)
- Taste and fashions
- Competitor actions
Market size – the value and volume
Market share – proportion of market owned
Market growth – the percentage growth over a period of time
CHOOSING A LEGAL STRUCTURE
Sole Trader
A business owned by a single individual
+ Quick and easy to set up
+ Simple to run
+ Minimal paperwork and simple accounting
- Full personal liability
- Harder to raise finance
- The business is the owner
CHOOSING A LEGAL STRUCTURE
Partnership
Where a business is owned by two or more people
+ The simplest way for two people to form a business together
+ Benefit from the expertise from all the owners
+ Greater potential to raise finance
- Full personal liability
- A poor decision by one partner damages the interests of others
- Harder to raise finance than a company
- Partners are bound to hour decisions of others
CHOOSING A LEGAL STRUCTURE
Limited company
A separate corporation owned by the shareholders
+ Limited liability
+ Easier to raise finance
+ Stable form of structure
- Greater admin costs
- Public disclosure of company information
- Directors legal duties
CHOOSING A LEGAL STRUCTURE
Social Enterprise
A business with a primarily social objective whose surplus is re-invested for that purpose in the business or community.
- Still running a proper business
- Giving something back
- Activities that benefit society
- Availability of government grants and other finance support
- Stakeholders gain from profits reinvested
- Example is the big issue
SOURCES OF FINANCE
Internal sources:
- Personal sources
- Retained profits
- Share capital from entrepreneur
- Sales of assets
External sources:
- Share capital from outside investors
- Friends and family
- Bank overdraft
- Bank loan
- Grants and other government incentives
Factors affecting choice:
- Control
- Cost
- Amount
- Timing and flexibility
SOURCES OF FINANCE
ADVANTAGES DISADVANTAGES
Personal Sources
- Owner remains in control- Flexible and the lowest cost- Builds personal commitment to the
start up.
- Opportunity cost- Entrepreneurs funds at risk- May be limited
Retained Profit
- Cheap and highly flexible- No loss of business control- Potentially large if profits are strong
- External shareholders may want a dividend
- Start-ups struggle to reach profitability
Bank Overdraft
- Flexible short term source of finance
- Only used when needed
- Expensive (high rate of interest)- Repayable to bank on demand
Bank Loan
- longer-term finance and more secure
- No effect on ownership
- Hard for a startup to obtain- Interest payable on entire amount- Bank may require security
Venture Capitalist
- Potentially significant source- Expertise and contacts can be
useful
- Loss of control- Longer and complex
Friends and Family
- Flexible- Doesn’t have to mean loss of
control
- Potential for personal disputes- May want some control or influence
over decisions
BUSINESS LOCATION
Location is the physical place from which a business is operated and controlled.
Quantitative factors- based on measureable information such as cost.
Qualitative factors- based on personal opinions and preferences such as quality of life.
Home Based Startup-
+ Low cost
+ Little travelling
+ Can be combined with domestic tasks
+ Lowers business risk
+ Freedom over what to wear
- Requires greater self discipline
- Work often interrupted
- Work never goes away
- Potentially lonely
- Could give poor impression to customers
BUSINESS LOCATION
Factors that influence the choice of location:
- Cost
- fixed costs raises break even output
- it’s best to try to minimise costs to lower risk of failure
- Proximity to the market
- need to be close to potential customers
- Infrastructure
- transport, telecommunication
- Personal and other qualitative issues
- location may create a USP that could attract customers or staff
EMPLOYING PEOPLEFull- Time- contracted employee working more than 30 hours a week
+ maximises output from each employee
+ available all the time
+ better returns from training
+ potentially better for customer service
- Higher costs
- is there enough work to justify a full timer
- Reduced flexibility
- Raises the breakeven output=higher risk
Part- Time- contracted employee working less than 30 hours a week
+ keeps costs down= lower breakeven output
+ may be easier to recruit
+ consistent with increasing demand for flexible working
- Not always able to handle the high workload
- Less opportunity for training
- Harder to communicate with them as they aren’t working long
Permanent- employed by the business for a non-specified amount of time.
Temporary- employment for a specific period after which employment is terminated or renewed.
+ Flexibility
+ ideal for certain tasks or projects
- Higher cost per hour
- Temps are less likely to know and understand
- Potentially negative customer service
Consultant- individuals and businesses external to the business that provide specific services and advice.
CALCULATING COSTS, REVENUES AND PROFITS
Costs- incurred in making and delivery of the products/services
Revenue- amounts earned by a business by selling products and services (Revenue= price x quantity sold)
Profit- the difference between total revenues and total costs.
Variable costs – costs which change as a result of changes in output
Fixed costs- costs which do not change in relation to changes in output
BREAKEVEN ANALYSIS
Breakeven point- the output at which total revenues equal total costs
Contribution- the difference between revenues and variable costs
Margin of safety- the difference between actual output and the breakeven output.
To reduce breakeven output:
- Maximise added value
- Reduce variable costs
- Reduce Fixed costs
Breakeven output =Fixed costs (£)
Contribution per unit (£)
Contribution per unit= selling price- variable cost per unit
Total contribution= contribution per unit x number of units sold
BREAKEVEN ANALYSIS
+ A crucial milestone
+ Focuses entrepreneur on a target
+ Encourages forecasting's of cash flow
+ Provides a measureable target
+ A key part of any credible business plan
+ Involves making estimates that could be wrong
- Ignores price and cost changes
- Assumes all output is sold
- New entrepreneurs may lack experience to make realistic estimates
- Breakeven output changes
CASH FLOW FORECASTING
A cash flow forecast is a prediction of cash inflow and outflow over a period of time.
Why a business should produce a cash flow forecast:
- Identifies potential shortfalls
- Ensure the business can afford to pay suppliers
- Spot problems with customer payments
- Important discipline of financial planning
- External stakeholders and banks may require a forecast
However a forecast may not be reliable as:
- Difficult to forecast the timings
- Linked to the quality of market research
- Need to be cautious
- Good to have different scenarios
- Will have to make assumptions
BUSINESS PLANNING AND BUDGETING
- Income sales budget
- Expenditure costs budget
- Profit budget
A business plan:
Contents include, executive summary, market profile, competition, protection of the business idea, management team, marketing, operations, financials, funding and exit strategy.
+ Provides a focus on the business idea
+ Clarifies thoughts and identifies gaps in information and market research
+ Encourages the entrepreneur to focus and plan the future
+ Measure against performance
+ Essential to raise finance
- Assumptions about a business are uncertain
- Entrepreneurs may be optimistic
- Market research may be limited/unreliable
- Startups may incur unanticipated costs
- Budgeting is generally easier when there has been experience in trading
OBJECTIVES OF STARTUPS
- Survival
- Growth
- Profit
- Or Intangible such as freedom
What can go wrong:
- Poor management
- Sales lower than expected
- Startup costs too high
- Poor quality
- Overtrading
- Competitor actions
- Lack of finance