Business Basics
Business Types
Forming Businesses
Markets/Marketing
Theories & Everything Else
100

Any physical products offered by a business.

Goods

100

a type of enterprise owned and run by only one person and in which there is no legal distinction between the owner and the business entity.

Sole proprietorship

100

A business entity owned, controlled, and operated by a group of users for their own benefit.

Cooperative

100

for-profit companies that have received certification from B Lab, a nonprofit organization that certifies businesses that meet certain social and environmental standards.

B Corp

100

Management view that employees are lazy, uninterested in work, and need to be prodded to perform their jobs.

Theory X

200

Intangible products such as health care, insurance, and recreation.

Services

200

Organization that operates for the common good and not to generate individual wealth.

Nonprofit organization

200

A corporate action in which one company buys the assets and obligations of another company and assumes control.

Acquisition

200

The amount of a commodity or service that people are ready to buy for a given price.

The quantity of a product producers are willing to sell at a given price.

Demand

Supply

200

Management view that employees enjoy work and take responsibility for meeting their work requirements.

Theory Y

300

The end result if a business’s expenses exceed the amount of money it earns during a given period.

Loss

300

a formal arrangement by two or more parties to manage and operate a business and share its profits.

Partnership

300

The joining of two or more business entities into a single entity.

Merger

300

Market situation with only one seller for a given product or service.

Monopoly

300

Management view that employee involvement in the organization and decision making leads to productivity.

Theory Z

400

Financial benefit realized when the amount of revenue gained from a business activity exceeds its expenses

Profit

400

a legal corporate structure in which the owners or shareholders are taxed separately from the entity.

Corporation or C Corp

400

A form of business in which one party gives another rights to sell its products or services and use its business format in a certain geographic area.

Franchise

400

Market situation in which each of a few producers affects but does not control the market.

Oligopoly

400

What are the 4 P's of Marketing

Product, price, place, and promotion

500

Income received by an organization from its normal business activities.

Revenue

500

corporations that elect to pass corporate income, losses, deductions, and credits through to their shareholders for federal tax purposes.

S Corp

500

An individual who has shared ownership in a partnership but takes no part in managing it and has limited liability.

Limited Partner

500

Two or more consecutive quarters of decline in GDP.

Recession

500

What are the three main financial statements?

Balance sheet, Income statement, and statement of cash flows