A
B
C
D
E
100

Account Payable

Money owed by a company to a supplier. Example: "I purchased $20,000 of beauty supplies for my big sidewalk sale. My supplier gave me 60 days to pay for this huge order. That $20,000 is now an Account Payable for my company. The supplier trusts me to pay this account payable on the terms we agreed to."

100

Bond

A loan. A bond is security that investors buy and sell, that represents a legal obligation from the company issuing the bond that they will repay the funds they received when they issued the bonds.

100

Capital

Expenditures

Expenditures

on

equipment

the

business

will

use

for

many

years.

100

Conflict

of

Interest

A

situation

in

which

an

individual

might

take

an

action

to

his/her

advantage


that

would

be

to

the

disadvantage

of

a

person

or

company

that

believes

this


individual

is

serving

them.

Example:

a

customer

tells

a

supplier

in

confidence


that

they

are

buying

a

large

quantity

of

a

specific

product

to

advertise

a

major


sale

in

two

weeks.

It

would

be

a

conflict

of

interest

for

that

supplier

to

go

to


competitor

stores

and

use

this

information

to

get

them

to

buy

more

of

this


product

and

put

it

on

sale

immediately.

100

Contribution


Margin

Unit

price

minus

cost

of

goods

sold.

200

Account Receivable 

Money owed by a customer to a company. Example:"I sold the new computer system to my  client for $20,000. They made an initial payment of $1,000 and now owe me $19,000, which they've promised to pay in 30 days. That $19,000 is an Account Receivable for me. I trust the Customer to pay this account receivable on the terms we agreed to."



200

Breakeven Analysis

A determination of how many units are needed to sell in order to pay for all fixed costs. Example 1: "That equipment costs $4,000. The contribution margin for each item it makes is $10. I will need to sell 400 items to breakeven on that investment." Example 2: "My overhead expenses are $50,000. The contribution margin on each item I sell is $50. I will need to sell 1,000 items for my company to breakeven."

200

Cash

Flow

Cash,

publicly

traded

stocks,

government

bonds

or

corporate

bonds

that

can


be

quickly

turned

into

cash.

Cash

Instruments

can

be

turned

into

cash

at


values

that

are

predictable

and

available

to

all

holders

of

the

cash

instrument.


Example:

"Apple

stock

is

a

cash

instrument

because

it

can

be

sold

and


converted

into

cash

immediately,

and

the

amount

anyone

would

get

for

that


Apple

stock

is

the

same

-­‐

the

price

of

the

stock

at

that

moment

in

the

stock


market."

200

Corporate

Social

Responsibility

Actions

entrepreneurs

and

companies

take

that

go

beyond

their

financial

self-­‐


interest.

These

actions

are

voluntary

but

often

reflect

the

personal

beliefs

of


business

leaders

about

what

their

companies

can

or

should

accomplish.

Many


companies

tie

the

actions

they

take

for

corporate

social

responsibility

to


initiatives

that

benefit

their

business.

Example:

the

local

pet

store

promises

to


donate

$1

to

the

local

animal

shelter

for

every

pet

owner

who

buys

the

pet


food

they

have

on

sale

over

a

weekend.

200

geaux BIZ

Portal

A

computer

portal

offered

by

the

Louisiana

Secretary

of

State

that

enables


entrepreneurs

to

go

to

a

single

source

to

learn

which

forms

they

need

to

file,


to

file

the

forms

required

by

the

Secretary

of

State,

and

to

determine

which


other

government

agencies

they

may

need

to

interact

with.

300

Angel Investors

Individuals that make small investments in an enterprise or to support an entrepreneur where they do not Expect an immediate or large return on investment. Angel Investors are typically “friends and family,” individuals who know the business owner and want the owner to succeed. Angel Investors typically provide small amounts of equity with no expectation of a large return.

300

Brokerage

A

company

that

provides

individuals

and

companies

with

access

to

financial


markets.

Example:

"I

buy

stocks

and

bonds

from

my

broker."

300

Collateral

Equipment,

inventory

or

other

goods

that

are

pledged

to

the

bank

in

the

case


the

company

can

not

make

a

loan

payment.

300

Extended

Payment

Terms

An

option

a

supplier

might

grant

a

company

to

pay

their

bills

later

than

they


normally

would.

Example:

"I

usually

have

to

pay

my

supplier

within

30

days


of

receiving

their

goods.

But

if

I

order

extra

for

a

big

sale

that

features

their


product

my

supplier

gives

me

extended

payment

terms

-­‐

60

days

-­‐

so

I

don't


run

out

of

money

before

the

sale."

300

Go

/

No

Go

The

decision

point

at

which

an

entrepreneur

makes

the

final

decision

on


whether

or

not

to

launch

a

new

enterprise

or

abort

the

effort

due

to


unfavorable

market

research

or

pro

forma

projections.

400

Assets

Something of value. Anything owed is an asset. Assets can be something big (like a house) or something small (like a piece of jewelry). A security is a financial asset, meaning a piece of paper that represents ownership and is worth money.

400

Business

Ethics

Proper

business

behavior

beyond

complying

with

legal

requirements.

A


simple

rule

guides

business

ethics,

the

same

basic

rule

that

should

guide

all


human

behavior:

act

towards

your

stakeholders

as

you

would

hope

they


would

act

towards

you.

400

Comfort Engaging with Strangers

The

ability

to

interact

in

a

friendly

and

effective

way

with

unfamiliar

people.


The

ability

to

seem

welcoming

and

easy

to

talk

to,

even

with

people

who

are


different

in

age,

appearance

or

background.

400

Fiscal

Year

The

12

month

period

a

company

uses

to

report

financial

results.

A

fiscal

year


can

be

the

same

as

a

calendar

year

(January

through

December),

or

any

other


12

month

period

that

makes

sense.

Example:

a

gift

store

chain

sells

most

of


its

items

during

the

Holiday

season

and

then

in

clearance

sales

during

January.


Therefore

the

gift

store

chain

uses

a

fiscal

year

of

February

1

-­‐

January

31

so


that

its

year-­‐end

accounting

doesn't

interfere

with

its

selling

efforts.

400

Grit

An

individual’s


self-­‐commitment

to

overcome

obstacles

to

achieve

long-­‐term


goals.

The

ability

to

keep

pursuing

your

dream

despite

challenges

and


defeats.

Perseverance,

resilience

and

backbone.

500

Bank Loan

Debt from a bank. Banks require much more information from potential borrowers, and take more time to make a lending decision based on a great deal of analysis. Therefore bank loans are less expensive than online lines of credit. 

500

Capital

(or

Equity)

Funds

contributed

by

investors

to

a

business.

Investors

contribute

capital

to

a


business

because

they

expect

a

significant

return

on

their

investment

when


the

business

succeeds.

500

Commission

Money

earned

when

something

is

sold.

Example:

the

real

estate

agent

who


sells

you

a

house

is

paid

a

2%

commission

on

the

value

of

the

house

sold.

500

Fixed

Costs

Costs

that

do

not

vary

based

on

the

units

sold

by

enterprise.

Fixed

costs

are


often

incurred

at

the

start

of

the

enterprise,

before

it

is

known

how

well

the


enterprise

will

perform.

Example:

when

you

sign

your

lease,

your

store

rent


is

now

a

fixed

cost

that

will

not

vary

based

on

how

many

units

you

sell.

500

Guarantor

A


credit-­‐worthy

individual

or

business

with

sufficient

liquidity

that

promises

to


repay

a

loan

in

the

event

that

the

debtholder

can't

make

a

required

payment.