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Business IGCSE Notes Complete Summary

1

Purpose of Business Activity:
The purpose of business activity is to identify and satisfy the needs and wants of the people
with the overall aim of earning profit.
Concept of Adding Value:
To add extra features to a product. The customer is willing to pay more after the value has
been added.
Nature of Economic Activity:
The nature of economic activity is that there are limited resources to satisfy unlimited
wants. Due to the limited resources (Scarcity), everyone has to make choices (individuals,
businesses, governments). This is known as the economic problem.
Factors of Production:
Land
Labour
Capital
Enterprise

Primary Sector
Extraction of raw materials from the Earth. E.g. Mining, Fishing.
Secondary Sector
Processing of raw materials into finished or semi-finished products.
Tertiary Sector
Service Industries. E.g. Transport
Quaternary Sector
Hi-tech industries. E.g. Trading, Health.
Chain of Production = Primary Sector (Extracting Iron) Secondary Sector (Processing
Iron into Car) Tertiary Sector (Sold by car dealership).
GDP = The total market value of all final goods and services produced in a country in a
given year. High GDP = More Jobs, Better Infrastructure, High Productivity, Balance of
Payment.

2

Decline: Primary and Secondary Sectors
A key factor in the decline of both the primary and secondary sectors in recent years has
been the impact of competition from overseas.
Great demand for raw materials in the UK has been increasingly met by imports
Many manufacturing businesses have relocated overseas where production costs are
cheaper.
Remaining UK-based manufacturing businesses have been forced to continually
lower their prices because of low-cost imports.
This decline is known as de-industrialisation.
Growth: Tertiary Sector
The growth in the tertiary sector has occurred for a number of reasons:
Increase in disposable income more paid on services
Tertiary businesses sell their services abroad and at home.
The tertiary sector has less scope for automation. Workers cannot be easily replaced with
machines.
Disposable Income
Income remaining after deduction of taxes and other mandatory charges
Opportunity Cost
The next best alternative given up by choosing another item.
Specialisation/Division of Labour
When the production process is split up into parts and each worker performs one of these
tasks.
Advantages Disadvantages
Increased efficiency
More work in less time
Workers can become bored
If one worker is absent, production is
stopped

Specialisation improves the efficiency of resources used (Scarce).
Value Added
Not the same as profit. It is the difference between the selling price of a product or service
and the cost of bought in materials and components

3

The Size of a Business Can Be Measured By the Following Means
Sales turnover
Share Capital
Profit
Market Share
Number of Outlets
Why Businesses Wish To Grow
Benefit from economies of scale
A larger Market Share
As means of survival if they wish to compete with other growing businesses.
Organically Growing (Internal)
Lower Price
Increasing Advertising
Selling in different locations
Sell on credit
Unnatural Growth (External)
Merger
Takeover
Conglomerate
Horizontal Merger
Merge or takeover a firm in the same industry at the same stage of production.
Vertical Merger
Merge or takeover a firm in the same industry, but at a different stage of production.
Conglomerate Merger
Merge or takeover a firm in a completely different industry. AKA Diversification.
Constraints On Growth (Disadvantages)
Financial Limitations
Size of the Market
Government Controls and Laws
Human Resources
Environmental Constraints
Consumer Action and Pressure Groups

4

Economies of Scale
The advantages of the company being big. Leads to a reduction in average costs
Purchasing Economies
The unit cost of each item decreases as large numbers of components are bought
(buying in bulk)
Marketing Economies
Purchase its own vehicles for distribution rather than rely on other companies. Sales
staff numbers will decrease and the size of advertisement will increase
Managerial Economies
Specialists and highly qualified individuals will prefer to work with a well known
company that can afford them, unlike small companies that cannot
Financial Economies
Raise capital more cheaply as banks believe it is less risky to lend to a bigger
business. A lower interest rate is therefore charged
Technical Economies
Flow production Specialists need advanced equipment to be bought and
maintained . Smaller businesses may not be able to afford these expenses
Diseconomies of Scale
The disadvantages of the being big. Average costs increase as business grows beyond a
certain size
Poor Communication
This makes sending/receiving messages much more difficult. Managers decisions
will be responded to in longer amounts of time and top managers will be so busy
directing affairs that they have no contact with employees/customers
Low Morale
Employees will feel unimportant and will not establish any relationships with fellow
employees. Managers will not work closely with subordinates, making them feel
unvalued, reducing efficiency
Tax
As the size of the business increases, the higher the amount of corporation tax it will
have to pay




5

Aims
The long term intentions of a business.
Objectives
Targets that must be achieved in order to realise the stated aims of a business.
Aim Objective
Survive the year
Maximise profits
Increase market share
Maximise share price
Open more stores
More advertising
Reduce costs
Beat competitors
Reduce waste
Reduce prices

Private Ownership Options
Sole Trader 1 Owner
Partnership 2-20 people (Solicitors, accountants)
> Unlimited Liability

Private Limited Companies Often a family run business with the
protection of limited liability.
Public Limited Companies Large organisations whose shares are
traded on the stock exchange.
Franchises Small business based upon an existing successful firm.
Cooperatives Collectively owned by workers/customers.
> Limited Liability
Unlimited Liability: Owners are responsible for all debts and may have to sell
personal possessions.
Limited Liability: Owners can only lose their investment even if the company has
huge debts.
Stakeholders
Any individual or group with a direct interest in the performance and activities of the
business.
Suppliers Keep a long term relationship
Financer Dividend
Customer Good quality for cheap price
Employees Work hard and receive salary
Owner Run their business and succeed
The business will try to please all stakeholders and achieve their aims, however, sometimes
there are conflicts. I.E. Win some, lose some.
6

Aims of the Government
Low Unemployment
Keep Inflation Down
Economic Growth
High Balance of Payment
How the Government Raises Its Money
VAT
Income Tax
Corporation Tax
Road Tax
National Insurance
An increase
in income tax
A decrease In
disposable
income
A decrease in
demand for
products
A decrease in
companies revenue
An increase in
corporation
tax
An increase
in costs
A decrease in
retained
profits
A decrease in
shareholders
dividend
A decrease in
VAT
A decrease in the
price of
companies
products
An increase in
demand for
products
An increase in
companies revenues

Public Sector
Central government controls these organisations
Main aim is to provide essential services for the whole population
They are not profit making
General public pays for these services through taxation
Some services are the responsibility of local government, such as refuse collection
and the maintenance of parks
Government Control Over Business Activity
Production of goods and services
Consumer protection
Control of monopolies
Protection of employees
A monopoly is when a single company owns all or nearly all of the market for a given type of
product or service.
7


Advantages of a Command Economy
There should be work for everybody
The needs of the population are met
Disadvantages of a Command Economy
Fixed wages meaning less incentive to work
Lack of profit meaning low efficiency/productivity
Advantages of a Free Market Economy
Workers work hard as they can keep most or all of their income due to low or non-
existent taxes
Businesses compete with each other, meaning low prices
Disadvantages of a Free Market Economy
There could be many uncontrolled economic booms or recessions
Businesses might be encouraged to create monopolies in order to increase prices
Advantages of a Mixed Economy
Government restrictions on monopolies
Businesses will aim to gain profit (competition)
Disadvantages of a Mixed Economy
Companies in the private sector must pay taxes
Too many government restrictions
How the Government Influences Private Firms
The law
Providing assistance to business
The government as a customer
Controlling monopolies


8

Interest rate
A cost for borrowing, or a reward for lending or saving.

= Interest Paid

How interest rates affects business
Cost to business of borrowing money
- High interest rates will cause costs to rise and profits to fall.
Cost to consumer of borrowing money
- Consumers buy many goods with loans.
- High interest rates will reduce demand as these goods become expensive.
Reward for Saving
- High interest rates encourage people to save rather than spend money.

Inflation
When prices of goods and services are rising.
The bank of England must control UK inflation.
The target is 2%.
If inflation is high they raise interest rates to reduce demand for goods.
If inflation is low they reduce the interest rate. This leads to an increase in demand.

High inflation leads to
People real income falls
Prices produced in country will be high
No expansion for businesses

High Interest Rates Low Interest Rates
Make business expansion hard
Make loans expensive
Encourage customers to save
Make business expansion easy
Make loans cheap
Encourage customer to spend

Inflation causes the price of raw materials to rise The business reacts by raising its prices
Customers cant pay the higher prices The business sells less Its staff demand pay
rises to match that inflation rate The business gives its staff pay rises The business
must raise its prices again.
9

Low levels of unemployment
Unemployed people do not produce (low output)
High unemployment compensation
Economic Growth
Rising employment and rising consumer incomes
High demand for goods and services
Businesses sell more, employs more, people spend more, everyone is confident.
Recession
Falling employment and consumer incomes
Fall in demand, consumer spending and confidence.
The business cycle
Economies go through periods of growth and recession, or trade cycles

Gross Domestic Product
The value of output of goods and services produced in the country during one year.
Includes all primary, secondary & tertiary sectors.
Balance of Payments
Comparing the difference of the amount of exports and imports. A negative balance of
payments means that more money is flowing out of the country than coming in, & vice
versa.
10

Electronic Commerce
E-commerce is the selling and buying of goods or services over the internet.

Advantages For Business:
Increased customer base
Cost effective
Improved productivity
Improved competitiveness
Reduce wastage

Disadvantages For Business:
Increased competition
Slow adoption
Purchasing the equipment
Maintenance
Training staff

Advantages For Customers:
Increased convenience
Greater choice
Cost effective
Product details
Customer reviews

Disadvantages For Customers:
No human interaction
Returning goods
Fraud
Stock issues




11

International Trade
Consumer choice
Increased competition
Business growth
Free trade (workforces and technologies anywhere in the world)

Advantages to International Trade
Specialisation
Consumers benefit from imported goods otherwise not available to them
Competition
Economies of scale
Best workforces
Disadvantages to International Trade
Competition
Movement to less well developed economies
Negative balance of payment
Global demand may be dominated by certain developed/developing economies
Barriers to Free Trade
Tariffs A tax or duty to be paid on a particular class of imports or exports
Subsidies Money granted by the government to local companies
Quotas Limiting the amount of a particular products imports/exports/production
Embargoes Ban on trade or commercial activity with a particular country
Arguments For Trade Barriers
They help protect small businesses and new industries
They prevent dumping
They prevent over-specialisation by protecting a range of different industries
Arguments Against Trade Barriers
They restrict consumer choice and opportunities for new businesses and business
growth
They protect inefficient domestic businesses with higher costs and often lower-
quality products
Other countries will retaliate by introducing their own trade barriers


12

Entering Overseas Markets Problems
Language Barriers
There are increased risks of non-payment
Different cultures, customs and tastes will need to be understood
The business must manage exchange rate risks
The business must comply with different laws, regulations and taxes
Overcoming Problems
A business can use local contacts
A business can set up assembly or sales only business units overseas
It can enter into a joint venture with an overseas business
A business can merge with or takeover an existing business

Management
Controlling
Measure and evaluate the work of all individuals and groups to ensure that they are on
target. It is the managers job to find out why targets are not being met and then correct the
problem
Planning
Planning for the future of the organisation by setting aims and objectives in order to give
the business a sense of direction and purpose. It also involves planning which resources will
be needed and setting strategies in order to achieve the set aims
Organising
Delegating tasks, responsibilities and resources to others in the organisation
Co-ordinating
Ensuring all departments in the organisation work together to achieve the plans originally
set by the manager
Commanding
Ensuring all supervisors and workers are keeping to targets and deadlines. Instructions and
guidance must be provided
Motivation
Improving the work ethic of employees through constant praise and rewards e.g. pay rise

13

Training
Giving knowledge to employees to help them achieve targets
Qualities of a Good Manager
Intelligence
Initiative
Self confidence
Assertiveness and determination
Communication skills
Energy and enthusiasm

Autocratic leader
A leader or manager in a business who doesnt delegate authority to the subordinate and
takes all the decisions by himself e.g. Police and defence
Democratic leader
A manager or leader who accepts the opinions of subordinates, discusses with them,
delegates authority and then takes the decisions
Laissez-faire leader
A leader or manager in a business who gives full freedom to the subordinates in their area
of work
Strategic decisions
Important decisions which can affect the overall success of the business
Tactical decisions
More frequently and less important
Operational decisions
Day-to-day decisions taken by a lower level manager






14

Departments in a Business
Accounting
Prepares budgets
Control cash flows
Marketing
Market research
Extends product life cycle
Plans new products
Human Resources
Recruit staff
Interviewing and selecting staff
Keep staff records
Production
Orders stock
Extends product life cycle
Decides production method
Administration
Cleaning, maintenance and security
Clerical office support
Responsibility for the IT system

Communication
If there is effective communication, there is high motivation.
Why Do Businesses Need to Communicate?
Obtain information
Decide on a course of action
Communicate plans for action
Communication Mediums
Oral Communication
Letters
Fax
Meeting
15

Communications in business can be Informal or Formal
Written Communication Pros/Cons
Permanent record of the
communication
Can be studied later if necessary
Can reach a wide number of people
Effective at conveying complex or
important info
Time consuming to produce/deliver
Complicated language
Instant feedback is not guaranteed
Risk that messages may be ignored

Communication Problems
The sender may not explain themselves properly
Information could have changed through the path of communication
The sender may use the wrong language
The receiver may not see or hear the information
Faulty technology
Timing of the information
How to Improve Communication
Technology
Reduce the number of layers the communication has to go through (Delayering)













16

Exchange rates
How Are Exchange Rates Determined?
Most currencies are allowed to vary or float on the foreign exchange market according to
their demand and supply of each currency, just as the prices of goods can vary according to
the demand and supply in a free market. Exchange rates will vary between currencies on a
day by day basis depending on supply and demand for currencies.








Advantages for UK Firms of the UK Joining The Euro:
Lower costs as one price list throughout Europe can be used
Lower costs as the charges for converting one European currency into another will
disappear
Easier to trade with other European countries
Easier to compare costs of supplies from different EU countries
No risks of losing out from exchange rate charges between European currencies
Globalisation
When the world becomes one large market rather than a series of separate national
markets
Free trade agreements and economic unions have reduced protection for industries. No
import controls.
Improved travel links and communications between all parts of the world. Easier to
compare prices and quality.
Advantages Disadvantages
Competition
Consumer choice
Cheaper prices
Higher standard of living
Lower sales Firms may find it hard
to sell
Lower profits Prices will be cut to
compete
Business closure and loss of jobs
17

Protectionism
When countries protect their industries from overseas competition
Problems
Retaliation
Price rises
Inefficient Industry
European Union
Organisation of 27 countries working to strengthen their economies. This leads to a single
market within Europe. Selling goods anywhere in the member states is easier. No tariffs or
controls.
- Creates a huge market for goods and services. Benefit from economies of scale
- Increased competition. More choice and lower prices, new higher quality
products
Common Currency
All euro. Same interest rates. Could lead to same tax rates. The UK has not joined yet.

Motivation
The desire of workers to work hard and complete tasks well. Not the same as morale. High
morale means workers are happy. This does not necessarily mean they work harder.
Motivation Increase Leads to
Higher Productivity
Higher Quality
Flexible Working Pattern
Financial Rewards
Wages & Salaries
Fringe Benefits (Perks e.g. Holiday)
Performance Related Pay Piece Rates, Time Rates
Non Financial
Job Rotation (Different jobs)
Job Enrichment (Interesting/challenging)
Job Enlargement (More tasks of a similar nature)
Better Working Conditions
Empowerment and Team Working
18


Person with the most authority is at the top. Least authority is at the bottom. This is known
as the chain of command. Orders are delegated down the chain of command. the number
of people each manager is responsible for is known as the span of control.
How the Hierarchical Structure Motivates Workers
Support mechanism
Rewards
Appraisal

By organising a company like this it allows them to specialise
It also increases accountability within each section e.g. performance can be monitored
Enables managers to identify which areas are performing well or not
Problems With a Long Chain of Command
Messages get lost or distorted
Resistance to change from people further down the chain
De-motivating feeling of being alienated
Each layer may own aims rather than that of the whole business
Delayering
Removing management layers of the hierarchy to flatten a long chain of command
Responsibility and decision making gets pushed down the line empowering
workers
Empowerment - can motivate workers and they might get a pay rise
Communication is quicker and more accurate
End result = Cutting Costs



19

Theories of Motivation
F.W.Taylor
Division of labour breaking a job into small repetitive tasks, each of which can be
done at a speed with little training.
Piece work Means payment by result, e.g. per item produced
Tight management Ensure the workers concentrate on their jobs and follow the
correct processes
Herzbergs Two Factor Theory
Motivators Hygiene/Maintenance Factors
Sense of achievement
Recognition for effort and
achievement
Nature of the work itself
Responsibility
Promotion and improvement
opportunities
Working conditions
Supervision
Pay
Interpersonal relations
Company policy and admin, inc,
paperwork, rules, red tape

Mcgregor Theory X and Theory Y
X= Dislike work, do not want responsibility and are not ambitious. Only work for money.
Y= Thinks work is natural and do not dislike it in principle. Accept responsibility and will seek
it. Committed to hard work and their greatest need is self-actualisation.










20

Accounting
Breaking Even
The break-even point is the level of output where an organization will just cover its
costs. When a business first starts up, its financial objective is likely to be to break-
even particularly if it is a small business. If the business sells more than this, it will
make a profit
Break-Even level of output =


Fixed costs
Costs that do not vary with output or sales e.g. Salaries, rent, Insurance, Interest and loans
Variable Costs
Costs that vary with the quantity produced or sold e.g. costs of raw materials, sales staff
commissions
Profit
Difference between total revenue and total costs
Contribution = Selling price Variable Costs
Total Revenue = Selling Price x Quantity
Total Costs = Variable Costs + Fixed Costs

Example:




No. of Guests
0 20 40 60 80 100 120
Fixed Costs 200,000 200,000 200,000 200,000 200,000 200,000 200,000
Variable Costs 0 50,000 100,000 150,000 200,000 250,000 300,000
Total Costs 200,000 250,000 300,000 350,000 400,000 450,000 500,000
Sales Revenue 0 100,000 200,000 300,000 400,000 500,000 600,000
21















Benefits of Break-Even chart
Make decisions about future investments
Helps businesses understand what the level or volume of activity needs to be in
order to be profitable
Cheap to carry out
Loan/budgeting
Helps spot potential problems
Limitations
External changes (cannot deal with sudden changes such as wages, prices and
technological changes)
Not all produced is sold
Fixed costs change with scale of production
It can apply to a single product or single mix of products
Rejects owners objectives of expansion (Fixed Costs)


22

Profit & Loss
Sales = Price x Quantity
Cost of Goods Sold = Opening Stock + Purchases Closing Stock
Gross Profit = Sales Cost of Goods Sold
Net Profit = Gross Profit Expenses

Opening Stock
Goods at the beginning of the year
Closing Stock
Goods that are left at the end of the year
Expenses
Extra costs that help operate a business
Dividends
Return payments to shareholders for investing in the company
Direct Costs
Costs which can be identified directly with the production of a good or service e.g. Raw
Materials
Indirect Costs
Costs which cannot be matched against each product because they need to be paid whether
or not the production of goods or services take place e.g. Rent on the premises
23

Balance Sheets
Shows the assets and liabilities of a business
Fixed Assets
Anything that you own as a business that can be useful for longer than one year e.g.
Buildings, machinery
Current Assets
Last less than 12 months e.g. Cash, stock, debtors
Debtors
People who owe your business money
Current Liabilities
Things that a business will need to pay out for within 12 months e..g. Creditors, Overdrafts
Creditors
Groups that your business owes money to
Overdrafts
Money that must be paid back to the bank within 12 months
Net Current Assets/Working Capital
The money that a business has for the day-to-day running of the business
Net Current Assets = Current Assets Current Liabilities
Net Assets Employed = Net Current Assets +Fixed Assets Long Term Liabilities
Capital Employed
The money you initially begin with
Long Term Liabilities
Mortgage, Long term loans
Capital Employed = Net Assets Employed





24

Ratio Analysis
1. Liquidity
The ability of the firm to pay its way
2. Investment/Shareholders
Information to enable decisions to be made on the extent of the risk and the
earning potential of a business investment
3. Gearing
Information on the relationship between the exposure of the business to loans as
opposed to share capital
4. Profitability
How effective the firm is at generating profits given sales and or its capital assets
5. Financial
The rate at which the company sells its stock and the efficiency with which it uses
its assets
Return on Capital Employed =


x 100
Gross Profit Margin (%) =


x 100
Net Profit Margin (%) =


x 100
Current Ratio =



Acid Test Ratio =



Gearing Ratio =


x 100
Operating Profit
Net Profit before Tax & Interest & Dividends

Budget
An estimate of income and expenditure for a set period of time.
Advantages of ratio analysis Disadvantages of ratio analysis
Evaluation of performance
Setting targets
Comparison with competitors
May not indicate how a business
will perform in future
Inflation comparison between
years may be misleading
25

Cash Flow
The majority of businesses who do not survive their first year of trading, fail because of cash
flow problems. Without sufficient cash to pay day-to-day bills, even a highly profitable firm
will be unable to survive.
Improve Cash Flow: Increase/Advance Inflows
Offer cash discounts
Reduce credit time
Chase up outstanding money owed
Sell assets
Bank overdraft/loan
Improve Cash Flow: Decrease/Delay Outflows
Negotiate longer credit terms with suppliers
Reduce purchases
Sale and lease back
Overdraft
Banking facility that enables a firm to spend more than the balance of the account
Sale and Lease Back
When a firm sells property freehold but simultaneously leases it
Opening Balance
Cash you have at the start
Inflows
Funds that come into a business or organisation e.g. money, sales, debtors, loans
Outflows
Funds that leave the business or organisation e.g. Creditors, overdrafts, wages, bills
Net Flow
Inflow - Outflow
Closing Balance
Opening Balance + Net Flow
Debt Factoring
Business sells its debts to a debt factor who advances payments against the debts, for a fee

26

Uses of a Cash Flow Forecast
Aids in decision making when starting up a business
Running an existing business future plans
Managing cash flow
Keeping the bank managers informed
How Cash Flow Problems Can Be Solved
Loans when negative cash flow
Reduce or delay planned expenses
Increase forecasted cash income in some way
Ask for credit on purchases

Week 1 Week 2 Week 3 Week 4
Opening Bank Balance 30 5 -5 10

Inflows
Pocket Money 0 10 0 30
Wages 20 5 70 0
Total Inflows 20 15 70 30

Outflows
Canteen 10 10 10 10
Travel 5 5 5 5
Clothes 0 0 40 0
Music 10 0 0 10
Social 20 10 0 5
Total Outflows 45 25 55 30

Net Cash Flow -25 -10 15 0

Closing Bank Balance 5 -5 10 10



27

Sources of Finance
Internal sources (raised from within the organisation)
External (raised from an outside source)
Owners Funds
When the person who starts the business brings their own savings into it
Doesnt have to be repaid
No restrictions
Limit to how much can be invested


Retained Profit
When a business uses its own profits to help expand in the future
No interest
Doesnt have to be repaid
Not available to a new business
Business may not make enough profit
to plough back

Bank Loan
The business borrows and amount of money which is repaid in instalments with interest
Spread over a period of time
No restrictions or limitations
Expensive due to interest
Bank may require security on the
loan

Trade Credit
Buying goods from suppliers and not paying them for 30-60 days
No interest charged if money is paid
within agreed time
Business can sell the goods first and
pay for them later
Discount given for cash payment
would be lost
Carefully manage cash flow to ensure
money will be available when the
debt is due to be paid

Overdrafts
When a business is allowed to spend more money in its account than it has
Cheaper than a bank loan if used in
the short-term
Interest
Can be expensive if used over a
longer period of time
28

Grants
When the government or EU provides the business with money as it is beneficial to the
economy
Dont have to be repaid
No interest
Government restrictions
Not all businesses are eligible

Hiring & Leasing
Using expensive equipment by paying a monthly charge
Up to date equipment immediately
Fixed Cost
Can be expensive
The asset belongs to the finance
company

Issuing Shares
Investors buy these from limited companies in return for a dividend each year
No interest
Doesnt have to be repaid
Decreased control over the business
Dividends to more shareholders

Selling Assets
Selling buildings or pieces of equipment that it no longer needs
Raise money from something no
longer needed
Unlikely to have surplus assets to sell
Slow method of raising finance

Venture Capital
Finance from a company which specialises in lending to successful small businesses
often in exchange for shares
More money to spend on growth
survival
Doesnt have to be repaid
Lost control




29

Marketing
The management process responsible for identifying, anticipating and satisfying customer
requirements profitably
Principles of Marketing
Understanding customer needs
Keeping ahead of competition
Communicating effectively with consumers
Utilising new technology
Product Orientated Business
Focuses mainly on the activity of the product itself. Product orientated businesses tend to
produce basic necessities and are general products that consumers need to buy may not
have their own name or brand. Manufacturer and retailer are mainly concerned with the
price and quality of the product.
Market Orientated Business
Carry out market research to find out consumer wants, adapt to changes and set prices
before a product is developed and produced. Market orientated businesses tend to survive
more than product orientated businesses as they are usually more prepared for changes in
customer tastes.
Objectives of Marketing
To increase market share
To maintain or improve brand image
To target new sectors
To develop new products
To increase sales and profits
Market Segmentation
Where the market has been divided up into groups of consumers who have similar needs
(segments). E.g. by income, age, region, gender, use of the product, lifestyle.
Market share
How much of the consumers the business owns, as in how much percentage the business
products are bought from the total consumers buying the product.
Mass Market a very large number of sales of a product
Niche Market a small specialised segment of a much larger market
4 Ps = Price, Place, Product, Promotion. Also known as the marketing mix.
30

Marketing Mix Product
Branding and Differentiation
A brand is a named product which customers can identify with and which is seen as
different from other similar products
Generic products are products made by a number of different businesses, which
customers fail to recognise and differences between e.g. Mp3 player
Own brand is one which is sold under the brand name of a supermarket, not the
company that manufactured it
Achieving Branding and Differentiation
Design. Make each product have different features, quality, build to others in the
range. Make your product features different to those of competitors
Name. Make each name unique. Either make the name reflect the product e.g. Gold
blend coffee or make the name obscure to imply that it is highly technical e.g. Intel
Pentium Processor. Some firms market themselves under the company name brand
e.g. Cadbury, whereas others prefer to do it through individualised branding e.g.
Nestle with Kit Kat and Yorkie.
Quality. Value for money
Packaging. Attractive appeal, protect the product, instructions
Range. Appeal to different market segments
After Sales Service. So the customer gets help when they need it
The whole purpose of branding is repeat custom
Unique Selling Point (USP)
What makes it different from everything else on the market
Advantages of Branding/Differentiation
Repeat Custom
Premium prices. A strong brand may allow firms to charge a higher price than rivals
Greater Consumer Awareness. Consumers are more likely to buy a high profile brand
rather than a rivals less well known brand
Increased Sales and Market Share. Retailers will devote shelf space to well known
brands
Disadvantages of Branding/Differentiation
High costs needed for massive promotion to establish and maintain the brand
A single bad event will affect the whole brands products
Launching a new version of the brand may lead to a risk of failure and damage to the
brand
Brand names may be difficult to protect in a world market fake products
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Extension Strategy
Extending the maturity stage to benefit from high sales & profit
Slightly changing the product to give it a fresh appeal to it its target market
Appeal to new segments
Repositioning is directing the product and its benefits to different segments E.g.
Lucozade went from sick people to targeting new segments
Wider Product Range is giving different variants to the same product E.g. Wrigleys
gum and their flavours
Aiming the product towards Specific Target Markets
Changing the appearance and packaging
Saturation
When everyone has the product

Market Research
The process of gaining information about customers, products, competitors through the
collection of primary and secondary data
Why Research the Market?
Identify consumer wants
Reduce the risk of the product failing
Helps decide which products to introduce or kill off
Helps firms understand how to improve products
Look at what competitors are doing

Quantitative data is about facts that can be statistically analysed and/or expressed as
numbers
Qualitative data is about opinions
32

Stages of Market Research
Designing the research
- What needs to be achieved and the best method of achieving it
- Qualitative or quantitative
Undertake the research
Analyse the data
- Charts/Graphs
- Reports
Primary Data AKA Field Research
Original data that has been collected first hand
Questionnaire
Everyone asked same questions
Easy to analyse
Expensive and time consuming
Difficult to express own opinions

Interviews
Detailed information
Can explain verbally/visually
Expensive
Interviewer may travel some distance

Focus Groups
Cheap
Response rate is good
Other members could sway opinions
Too small a sample

Panels
Detailed
Show how opinions change over time
Difficult to keep same panel over
time

Sampling
Random A percentage of the population is chosen. Equal chance of selection
Quota Population is split into segments and a set number is chosen from each
segment. Reflects each segments opinions
Targeted Asking only those who fit in a certain category
Product Samples
Easy to do
Response rate is good
Not representative
People reluctant to give criticism
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Secondary Data AKA Desk Research
Data that already exists and has been collected by someone else E.g. Internet, Books,
Newspaper, Market Research Agencies
Advantages of Desk Research
Cheap
Instantly available
Wide collection of opinions
Time saving
Disadvantages of Desk Research
Out of date/Continuously changing
Inaccurate (time consuming)
Does not anticipate consumer wants/needs
Only Market Research Agencies are expensive
Open Questions
Allow respondents to give opinions without being tied to a set answer E.g. What do you
think about our product?
Closed Questions
Questions that require specific answers with a limited range of responses E.g. Do you use
our product?
Bad Questions
Bias/Leading Questions Make people answer it in the way you want them to
Weasel Words Phrased so badly that it is misunderstood

Marketing Mix Price
Cost-plus Pricing
Aimed at ensuring the business covers its costs and makes an acceptable profit. The total
costs of producing one unit of the product are calculated to which is added the required
profit margin. This gives the selling price
Very easy and fast to calculate
Ensures that all costs are covered
Does not look at what competitors
are charging
Does not take into account how
much the customer is willing to pay

34

Competitive Pricing
Competition is strong. Customers have a wide choice of suppliers to buy from. Businesses
must set their prices close to the prices of competitors, having regards to the quality of the
product and any unique selling points (USPs)
Avoid price competition which could
damage the company
Only just cover production costs
low profits
Business must attract customers in
other ways, price will not do

Price Skimming
New product is likely to generate a high volume of initial sales and is priced high to
maximise profits. Price is reduced when initial demand has subsided
High prices give the product a good
image
Pay back research and development
costs
Competitors may lower prices, taking
away your market
Put off potential customers because
of high price

Penetration Pricing
Low initial price when entering the market to try and capture a share of the market. The
price is then raised when more customers are aware of this product to maximise profit.
Increases market share quickly
Attracts customers to try it
Does not pay back R&D costs
Revenue is lost when low price

Promotional Pricing
Charging low prices for a short period of time to attract new customers and increase sales
Earn revenue on what would not sell
Renew customer interests
Profits will be lower
Can be risky if sales dont rise

Psychological Pricing
Pricing strategy that pays attention to the effect that a price will have on the way a
customer thinks E.g. 1.99 instead of 2
Encourages customer to buy
Calculation complication


35

Destroyer Pricing
When a business lowers its products pricing so much that all competitors are destroyed
Increases market share
Increases sales
Reduces profits
Small profit cannot be used on
growth/extension

Price Discrimination
Dependant on the customer. E.g. Health insurance for an old person in comparison with a
young person
Prices are driven by market forces called demand and supply
If price goes up, demand goes down and vice versa








If price goes up, to take advantage of higher profits, supply also goes up.








The place where the two lines cross is called the equilibrium, where the same number of
goods are demanded and in supply resulting in no leftovers

36








Factors Affecting Demand
The popularity of substitute products (products that can be used instead of the
product)
The popularity of complimentary products (products that require each other or are
used together)
Changes in income
Changes in taste and fashion
Changes in advertising
Factors Affecting Supply
Taxes and Subsidies Higher taxes means higher costs. Subsidies lead to lower costs.
Climate (for agricultural products) Supply of crops depends on weather
Improvements in technology Makes it cheaper to produce goods
Costs in supplying goods to the market
- Price of raw materials
- Wage rates (because of inflation)
Price Elasticity



If result = 1 or above then it is elastic. If price is changed then sales decrease/demand
falls. Consumers do react
If result = Less than 1 then it is inelastic. Can be sold at a higher price as demand will not
change. Usually high quality branded products. Consumers do not react much.





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Marketing Mix Place
Where the product is sold and how it gets to the customer
Channel of Distribution
The route and stages the product goes through to reach the final customer
Method #1
Customer convenience
Cost saving as consumers are close
Limited number of consumers nearby
If product is big then it will be
expensive to mail/ship

Method #2
Everyday products need to be widely
available retailers provide this
Helps perishable products sell quickly
Competitors will use the same
retailer to compete directly for
customers
Increased cost - extending credit to
retailers

Method #3
Breaking bulk
Reduce storage
Provide credit to small retailers
More expensive to buy from
wholesaler
May not have the full range of
products to sell
Takes longer for fresh produce to
reach shops

Breaking Bulk
The wholesaler buys in large quantities from the manufacturer and sells to the retailer in
small quantities
38

Method #4
Manufacturer has some control over
the way the product is sold in other
markets
Agent is aware of local conditions
and what places best sell
Agent will charge a price or receive a
commission on sales
Prices may be raised by manufacturer
to cover cost of agent. Every stage
following also increases price


Marketing Mix Promotion
1. Advertising
Paid for communication. Create awareness and transmit information in order
to gain a response from the target market.

Above the line advertising: Expensive medium e.g. TV

Below the line advertising: Cheap medium e.g. leaflet

2. Sales Promotions



3. Public Relations
The actions of a corporation promoting good will between itself and the
public, the community. Employees, customers etc.
Newsletters, Press releases, blogs, photos, social media.

4. Personal Selling Promotion
Effective way to manage personal customer relationships. The sales person
acts on behalf of the organisation. They are well trained and have good
speaking skills. However, they are very expensive and should only be used
when there is a genuine return on investment.

5. Trade Fairs and Exhibitions
Excellent way to talk directly to customers.
Show larger items (boats, cars etc)
Demonstrate Products


Extra % fee
Free Gifts
Coupons
Events
Competitions
Free Samples
Buy one get one free
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6. Sponsorship
Positive associations of the product with a celebrity.
Can be very expensive
Difficult to tell what impact this has on brand loyalty or sales

Factors Affecting Location
Production
- Labour
- Natural resources
- Suppliers
Cost of premises
Government influence (Grants Limits on production (CO
2
emissions - tax)
Business rates (Monthly payments E.g. Power, Water)
Transport and communications
Information Technology
Customers
History and tradition
Climate
Personal preferences of the owner
Competitors

Factors Affecting Production
Job Production - Catered to meet each customers specific order. One off product.
Exact Requirements
Job satisfaction
High quality goods
Design is flexible
Expensive
Time consuming
Advantages of economies of scale are
lost

Batch Production Produces a number of similar items. Created in parts that are put
together at the end.
Workers may specialise
Labour costs lowered so final price is
lowered
Machinery may be used
Production is faster
Uninteresting work (repetitive)
More space is required for working
and storage
Larger stock of raw materials must be
kept
40

Flow Production When the product is standardised and can be made using a
production line method. Continuous process takes place.
Final product is inexpensive
Production is fast
Large quantities can be
manufactured
Work is repetitive (low motivation)
Large stock of raw materials must be
kept
Large capital investment is required

Productivity The quantity of goods produced in a given time. AKA output.
Productivity formula
Workers x Pieces created by workers x Time
Improve efficiency More produced in the same amount of time. Less costs, more
profits
Labour productivity When workers are trained, skills are developed and used more
efficiently to produce more in the same amount of time.
Ways of improving productivity
Training staff
Specialisation
Improve technology/machinery
Reduce downtime
Improve motivation
Better quality raw materials
Downtime When production is slowed or stopped
Quality
Consistently providing what the customer wants by meeting their needs and expectations.
Poor quality is a source of competitive disadvantage.
Results of poor quality
Lost customers
Cost of reworking or making product
Cost of replacement or refunds
Wasted materials
Quality Management
Quality control
Quality assurance
Total quality management (TQM)
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Quality Control
Detection, not prevention. This makes it very expensive. Identify faulty products. This
involves inspecting and sampling products as they are produced.
Maximises production
Sampled at regular intervals to check
for errors.
Higher costs in remaking products
Wasted materials

Quality Assurance
How the product is designed to minimise the chances of a fault prevent. The focus is on
the development stage. If production is well controlled, then quality will be built in. if
production is reliable, there is less need to inspect production output.
Quality is built in
A quality standard is set
If workers do not support the system,
it will not be effective
Cost, demand and delivery schedules
can be hard to anticipate.

Total Quality Management
Attitude based. The whole business understands the need for quality and seeks to achieve
it. Every stage of production is concerned and quality is checked by workers, not inspectors.
Sampling and inspection at end are
eliminated.
Workers are motivated, as they are
given more responsibility
Time consuming
Workers must be trained

Lean Production
Reducing waste
Improving efficiency
Improves quality of products
Kaizen
Continuous improvement. Overall progress comes from small improvements being made all
the time, even when the process/product seems to be working. Groups of employees meet
regularly to discuss ways in which production quality can be improved.
Kanban
System that uses two components. One being used on the production line, while the other
is being made ready. E.g. Component bins, one with materials to build car. Bin 2 is being
filled and will be delivered when bin 1 is empty.
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Cell production
Where work is organised into team and are given responsibilities. This leads to improved
productivity as a result of increased motivation (team spirit and added responsibility) and
specialisation.

Just In time
Focus is on reducing or eliminating the need to hold stocks. Raw materials are ordered when
order is placed, delivered just in time to be used in the production process. Making of parts
are just in time to be used in the next stage, and the product is finished just in time to be
delivered to the customer.
Reduces costs of holding stock
No money held up in stock
Reliable suppliers and customers are
needed.
Difficult to meet sudden increase in
demand.






43

Boston Matrix
Describes products according to their market share they enjoy and whether the market has
any potential to grow.

Dogs are at the end of their life cycle.
Cash cows at the maturity stage of their product life cycle.
Stars are profitable products.

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