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Business Studies · Understanding business activity

Types of business organisations

CIE 04502 min read

Key definitions

Limited liability — The owner's legal identity is separate from the business. Only the assets belonging to the company are risked.

Unlimited liability — The owner's legal identity is not legally separated from the business. The assets belonging to the owner AND the business are risked.


Forms of business organisations

Sole trader

A business with only 1 owner.

AdvantagesDisadvantages
Profit is kept by the ownerUnlimited liability
Easy to set upLess capital
No continuity (the business will die if the owner dies)

Partnerships

A business with 2–20 owners.

AdvantagesDisadvantages
More range of skills to work withIf a partner leaves, business is dissolved
More capital can be raisedConflict can occur between partners
Easy to set up

Private and public limited companies

A company registered with the government to become a separate legal identity, owned by multiple shareholders. They can sell shares (a % of their company) to raise capital; people who own shares are shareholders.

Private limited company

AdvantagesDisadvantages
Shareholders have limited liabilityExpensive and has many legal formalities
Easy to raise capitalCannot sell shares on the stock market — can only sell to friends, family and known people
Shared decision makingProfit is shared
Has continuity

Public limited company

AdvantagesDisadvantages
Limited liabilityMany legal formalities (more than private), e.g. accounts must be made public
Easier to raise capitalExpensive to start
Can sell shares to the public on the share marketGeneral meeting for shareholders must be held
Has continuity

Franchises

Franchise — a business (the franchisor) agrees to another business (the franchisee) opening a branch, a franchise, of the mother business, using their business idea. E.g. KFC.

Advantages and disadvantages to the franchisor

AdvantagesDisadvantages
They are paid royalty fees for the use of the business ideaLoss of control over business
They build brand reputation and spread globally (expansion) without managing the new businessesReputation can be affected
The franchisee will run the franchiseMaterials and support will need to be provided
The franchisee may understand the country's local market better

Advantages and disadvantages to the franchisee

AdvantagesDisadvantages
They have an existing customer base to begin withIt is expensive to set up
They do not need much experience as they will be receiving supportProfit must be shared
Less riskThere is no full control over business decisions
Raw materials and products are supplied by the franchisorAdvertisements and promotion must be done by the franchisee

Joint ventures

Joint venture — an agreement where 2 or more businesses work together for a specific cause/business activity.

AdvantagesDisadvantages
Reduces risk of failureConflict may arise during decision making
Ideas can be shared
Market and product knowledge is shared
Costs will be shared by both businesses

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