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Enterprise and Entrepreneurship

Subject: Business Studies
Topic: 1
Cambridge Code: 0264 / 0450 / 7115


Enterprise

Enterprise - Ability to identify business opportunities and create/develop businesses

Characteristics of Entrepreneurs

  • Willing to risk money
  • Creative and innovative
  • Self-motivated
  • Hard-working
  • Risk-taking
  • Problem-solving
  • Vision for business

Business Ownership

Sole Trader

  • One owner
  • Simplest form
  • Owner liable for debts
  • All profit to owner
  • Easy to set up

Partnership

  • Two or more owners
  • Shared responsibility
  • Shared profits
  • Joint liability
  • Partnership deed

Private Limited Company (Ltd)

  • Limited liability
  • Shares not sold publicly
  • Share transfer restricted
  • More complex

Public Limited Company (PLC)

  • Shares traded publicly
  • Larger capital available
  • Limited liability
  • Regulated heavily
  • Professional management

Business Objectives

Primary Objectives

Profit Maximization - Highest possible profit

Survival - For new businesses, stay operational

Growth - Increase market share, revenue

Secondary Objectives

  • Market share increase
  • Stakeholder satisfaction
  • Social responsibility
  • Environmental protection

Business Identification

Market Gaps

  • Unmet customer needs
  • New market segments
  • Seasonal demand
  • Quality improvements
  • New technology applications

Identifying Opportunities

  • Market research
  • Customer feedback
  • Trend analysis
  • Competitor analysis
  • Problem-solving

Business Planning

Business Plan - Document outlining business strategy

Components

  1. Executive Summary - Brief overview
  2. Business Description - What business does
  3. Market Analysis - Industry, competition, customers
  4. Marketing Strategy - How to attract customers
  5. Financial Projections - Revenue, costs, profit
  6. Operations Plan - Daily operations
  7. Management Structure - Who runs business

Importance

  • Bank lending decisions
  • Investor confidence
  • Internal guidance
  • Strategic planning
  • Risk identification

Feasibility Study

Feasibility Study - Investigation of viability

Aspects

Technical Feasibility:

  • Can technology/methods work?
  • Available equipment/skills

Market Feasibility:

  • Market demand exists?
  • Sufficient customer base
  • Sustainable demand

Financial Feasibility:

  • Affordable?
  • Sufficient funding?
  • Profitable?

Legal/Social Feasibility:

  • Legal requirements?
  • Social acceptance?
  • Environmental impact?

Start-Up Costs

Initial Investment Needed:

  • Land and buildings
  • Equipment and machinery
  • Stock/inventory
  • Technology systems
  • Legal fees and licenses
  • Working capital

Business Risks

Market Risk

  • Demand decreases
  • Competition increases
  • Customer preferences change

Financial Risk

  • Cash flow problems
  • Inability to raise funds
  • Cost increases

Operational Risk

  • Equipment breakdown
  • Supply chain disruption
  • Key employee loss

Strategic Risk

  • Poor decisions
  • Slow market adaptation
  • Technology changes

Key Points

  1. Entrepreneurs identify opportunities
  2. Different ownership forms (sole trader, partnership, company)
  3. Clear business objectives needed
  4. Business plan guides operations
  5. Feasibility study assesses viability
  6. Start-up costs require careful planning

Practice Questions

  1. Compare sole trader and partnership ownership
  2. Identify business opportunity in your area
  3. Create simple business plan outline
  4. List start-up costs for specific business
  5. Analyze risks for proposed business
  6. Evaluate entrepreneurial characteristics

Revision Tips

  • Know ownership structure pros/cons
  • Understand business objectives
  • Learn business plan components
  • Know feasibility study elements
  • Identify potential business ideas
  • Analyze business risks