A business sells:
Question:
How much money did the business make in total revenue?
What is $180
A business notices that teenagers are buying their products the most.
Question:
What should the business focus on learning more about?
Teenagers / their target audience / what teenagers like to buy.
A restaurant spends:
But only makes:
Question:
Did the business make profit or loss?
Loss of $300
An investor gives a business:
Question:
Why would the investor expect something in return later?
Profit / return on investment / business growth.
A business owner keeps lowering prices every time competitors lower theirs.
Question:
Why could this eventually become dangerous?
Profits become too small / business may lose money / race to the bottom.
Crochet Cubed sells:
Expenses:
Question:
What is the total profit?
Revenue:
10 × 18 = 180
Expenses:
50 + 20 = 70
Profit:
$110
A business sells expensive sneakers, but middle school students cannot afford them.
Question:
What is ONE possible problem with the business strategy?
Prices too high / wrong target audience / poor market fit.
A business owner spends ALL their money on:
But barely advertises the business.
Question:
Why could this be a bad business decision?
Nobody knows the business exists / poor money management / focusing on wrong priorities.
Two businesses sell the exact same product.
Business A:
Business B:
Question:
Why might customers still choose Business B?
Trust / quality / reputation / customer experience.
A business owner works:
Question:
Why could this hurt the business long-term?
Burnout / business cannot grow / owner becomes bottleneck / poor scalability.
A business sells:
Expenses:
Question:
Did the business make a profit or a loss, and how much?
Revenue:
20 × 25 = 500
Expenses:
180 + 75 + 45 = 300
Profit:
$200
A business suddenly goes viral online and gets too many orders.
Question:
Name ONE problem the business might face.
Possible Answers
A student creates a clothing brand with:
But charges:
Question:
Why might the business struggle?
Too expensive for target audience / low demand / poor pricing strategy.
A business owner refuses to change anything even though sales keep dropping.
Question:
Why is this dangerous for a business?
Businesses must adapt / customers change / competitors improve / risk of failure.
A business becomes successful very quickly.
Question:
Why can growing TOO FAST sometimes hurt a business?
Possible Answers
A business lowers prices from:
Sales double immediately.
Question:
Does this GUARANTEE the business will make more profit?
What is No
A competitor starts selling the SAME product for cheaper.
Question:
Name TWO smart ways the business could respond.
Possible Answers
A candy business becomes popular at school.
Question:
Name TWO possible problems the school might have with students selling candy.
Possible Answers
A business earns:
But owes:
Question:
Is this business successful right now? Why or why not?
No.
Revenue alone does not equal success if expenses and debt are too high.
A company spends millions on advertising but customers never return after buying once.
Question:
What does this suggest about the business?
Poor product/customer experience / weak retention / customers unhappy.
A business makes:
Monthly expenses:
Question:
Did the business make profit or loss?
Expenses:
500 + 300 + 150 + 100 + 200 = 1,250
Loss:
$50
A business has:
Question:
Why could this become a major problem long-term?
Customers stop buying / bad reputation / negative reviews / loss of trust.
A business gets:
But:
Question:
How is this possible?
Possible Answers
A business becomes extremely popular because of social media trends.
Question:
Why could this STILL be risky long-term?
Possible Answers
A business owner has two choices:
OPTION A:
Make fast money using low-quality products.
OPTION B:
Grow slower but build customer trust over time.
Question:
Which strategy is more sustainable long-term and WHY?
Usually Option B.
Because trust, reputation, repeat customers, and long-term sustainability matter more than quick short-term money.