1.1 What is a business?
1.2 Types of business entities
1.3 Business objectives & 1.4 Stakeholders
1.5 Growth & evolution
1.6 Multinational companies
100

The inputs used by a business to produce goods and services: capital, enterprise, land & labour (CELL). 

What are the four factors of production?

100

This type of business is owned and operated by a single individual who has unlimited liability

What is a sole trader (sole proprietor)?

100

This is the concept of meeting the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their needs

What is sustainability?

100

This type of growth happens when a business expands using its own resources, such as opening new stores using its own staff and capital. 

What is internal growth?

100

A publicly held company that operates production facilities in two or more countries

What is a multinational company (MNC)?

200

This type of business organization is owned by shareholders and its shares are typically traded on a stock exchange.

What is a publicly held company (plc)?

200

This legal structure allows two or more individuals to share profits, responsibilities, and risks but does not protect their personal assets from business liabilities

What is a partnership?

200

This statement communicates a business's purpose and core activities, often aimed at stakeholders like employees and customers

What is a mission statement?

200

When average costs fall because a business increases its scale of production

What are economies of scale?

200

Gross Domestic Product (GDP) is negative for 6 consecutive months

What is an economic recession?

300

These government-owned organizations focus on addressing basic human needs, such as water, electricity, and healthcare, often considered vital for society.

What are public sector organizations?

300

This set of business policies ensures that a company considers the needs of society and the environment, balancing economic, social and environmental sustainability.

What is corporate social responsibility (CSR)?

300

The Ansoff Matrix identifies these four strategies to help businesses assess risks and opportunities for growth

What are market penetration, product development, market development, and diversification?

300

Those who operate within the organization and thus they tend to have a direct impact on the success of the organization. Examples include: employees, managers, directors. 

What is an internal stakeholder?

300

This economic indicator measures the increase in the average price level of goods and services over time. 

What is inflation?

400

This is calculated as: selling price - raw material costs

What is added value (value added)?

400

This theory describes ‘3 P's of sustainability’. Economic (p..........), social (p..........) and environmental (p.......). 

What is people, planet and profit?

400

A business tool that looks at how organizations might prioritize the needs of different stakeholder groups, depending on the amount of interest and the amount of influence that the stakeholder group is perceived to have

What is a stakeholder map?

400

When a business grows too large and experiences rising average costs, caused by things such as miscommunication or poor control over staff. 

What are diseconomies of scale?

400

The rise in remote work and digital nomadism is an example of this STEEPLE factor

What are 'social' changes (factors)?

500

This sector of the economy focuses on activities involving the generation and sharing of knowledge and information, often requiring highly specialized expertise. Examples include IT services, data mining, and consultancy

What is the quaternary sector?

500

This type of non-profit organization operates in the private sector but often collaborates with governments to deliver services that benefit the public, such as in healthcare or education. 'Doctors Without Borders' are an example. 

What is a non-governmental organization (NGO)?

500

These models are designed to turn all the waste that businesses and consumers produce into valuable and productive resources to be used again

What are circular business models?

500

Larger businesses can afford specialized machinery, robotics, and technology that leads to improvements in efficiency and productivity and therefore lower average costs of production

What are technical economies of scale?

500

This type of investment occurs when a MNC buys land, factories, vehicles, or other capital in another country

What is foreign direct investment (FDI)?

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