1 / 10

Business Management – higher Business enterprise

Business in Contemporary Society The Role of Business in Society. Business Management – higher Business enterprise. Business Activity. Everyone in our society has ‘wants’. eg : food, clothes, shelter, entertainment , travel…

roz
Télécharger la présentation

Business Management – higher Business enterprise

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Business in Contemporary Society The Role of Business in Society Business Management – higherBusiness enterprise

  2. Business Activity • Everyone in our society has ‘wants’. • eg: food, clothes, shelter, entertainment, travel… • To satisfy these wants we make use of (consume) goods and services. • If suitable goods and services were not available, we would not be able to satisfy our wants. • It is through business activity that goods and services are provided. • Therefore a definition of business activity is any kind of activity that results in the provision of goods and services which satisfy human wants.

  3. Goods & Services • Goods are tangible while services are intangible. • Goods sold to the general public are often referred to as consumer goods. • Consumer goods may be classified as durable goods like cars, washing machines, or personal computers; • or non-durable goods like sweets, drinks, newspapers. • Durable goods can be used regularly over a long period of time while non-durable goods are consumed over a short period, usually soon after they are bought. • Egsof services are going to the hairdresser, being served in a restaurant, or visiting a doctor.

  4. Goods and services can be described as the outputs of business activity. • In order to produce these outputs, business makes use of resources, also called factors of production.

  5. Factors of Production • land(i.e. all natural resources, from mineral deposits to the site of a factory) • labour (i.e. all human resources) • capital (i.e. all resources which have been made by labour, such as machinery and other equipment) • enterprise (i.e. organising the other factors of production and taking the risk of producing goods or services in advance of them being sold). • In summary, then, business activity involves using resources to produce goods and services which people require in order to satisfy their wants.

  6. Wealth Creation • Business activity can be described as ‘wealth-creating’. • This is because the term ‘wealth’ is used to refer to the amount of goods and services, or output available – the more goods and services that exist the greater the amount of wealth. • In this sense, then, wealth is not money as such but the total of goods and services which can be given a monetary value.

  7. Markets • Finally, goods and services are sold in markets. • These exist where goods and services are exchanged between consumers and producers. • Egsof markets are the housing market, the market for snack foods, and the financial services market.

  8. Cycle of Business

  9. Sectors of Industrial Activity • Primary sector- businesses involved in taking natural resources from the land, that is, agriculture and extractive industries egcoal mining. • Secondary sector- those businesses which use resources to make or build their products, iemanufacturing and construction firms. • Tertiary sector- the firms which provide services rather than goods. Egbanking and hairdressing, where a service is performed for a customer but no goods change hands, transporting goods, and acting as an intermediary between manufacturer and customer.

  10. Countries tend to go through three stages of development. • Firstly they are dominated by the primary sector, as is the case in less developed countries (and was true of the UK up until the Industrial Revolution 200 years ago). • Secondly, experienced by the UK from around 1800 until the middle of the 20th century, secondary sector industries such as steel, car manufacturing and shipbuilding are the most important. • Lastly, the tertiary sector becomes the largest and fastest growing, both in terms of output and employment.

More Related