Step 1

Read the command word first

Command word reference

Command wordMarksWhat the examiner wants
State / Give / Identify1One word or phrase. No explanation needed.
Define2A precise definition. A brief example strengthens it.
Calculate2–4Formula → substitute → work through → units → interpret.
Explain one [reason/way]3One full MOPS chain. If it says “one reason” do not write two – only the first is marked.
Explain two [reasons/ways]6Two separate MOPS chains in separate paragraphs.
Assess10Both sides with analysis. Justified conclusion tied to the specific context.
Evaluate20Multiple developed arguments both ways. Clear overall judgement. Context throughout.
Justify20Pick ONE option. Defend it. Acknowledge the other. Explain why yours is better for this business.
Justify ≠ Evaluate. Evaluate = argue both sides then decide. Justify = commit to one option from the start and defend it. Sitting on the fence in a Justify question caps your marks at a lower band regardless of the quality of your writing.

Step 2

Use MOPS for every developed point

The MOPS framework

Apply this to every paragraph in any question worth 3 marks or more. Stopping after O is the most common reason students fail to reach the top mark band.

M
Make your point
State your argument in one sentence. What is happening or what is your claim?
O
Offer an explanation
Explain the mechanism. How or why does this happen? What is the cause-and-effect?
P
Provide evidence
Support with data from the case study, a specific figure, or a real-world example.
S
State significance
So what? Explain the impact on this specific business – profit, cash flow, competitive position, reputation, staff.
Worked example

“Explain one benefit of price skimming” – 3 marks

  • M: Price skimming allows a business to charge a premium price in the early stages of a product’s life.
  • O: Early adopters tend to be less price-sensitive and are willing to pay more than later buyers.
  • P: Apple consistently launches the iPhone at £999+ before reducing the price once the mass market is targeted.
  • S: This maximises contribution per unit sold while competition is low, helping recover high R&D costs quickly and improving the business’s short-term cash flow position.
A 3-mark answer needs M, O, and S at minimum. For 6-mark questions, write two separate MOPS chains – one per paragraph. Do not merge two reasons into one paragraph.

Step 3

10-mark “Assess” questions

Structure: both sides + a contextualised conclusion

  1. Paragraph 1 – argument FOR: one full MOPS chain (3–4 sentences)
  2. Paragraph 2 – argument AGAINST: one full MOPS chain (3–4 sentences)
  3. Conclusion: state which side carries more weight for this specific business and why (2–3 sentences)
“It depends on the business” is not a conclusion. “For a small start-up with limited cash reserves, the lower fixed cost base outweighs the brand risk because…” is. Your conclusion must be tied directly to the context given in the question.
Common mistakes

What costs marks in Assess questions

  • Writing only one side – one-sided answers cannot access the top mark band regardless of quality
  • Describing what the business does without analysing the impact – always complete the S in MOPS
  • A conclusion that just repeats the question without making a judgement
  • Generic analysis that could apply to any business – always refer to the specific business in the question

Step 4

20-mark “Evaluate” and “Justify” questions

Evaluate – argue both ways, then judge

  1. 2–3 MOPS paragraphs developing the main argument
  2. 1–2 MOPS paragraphs developing the counter-argument
  3. Conclusion: weigh the evidence and state which side is more compelling for this specific context. Do not hedge.
Depth beats quantity. One fully-developed MOPS chain earns more marks than three undeveloped points. Target 4 substantive paragraphs + a conclusion.

Justify – commit to one option from the start

  1. Opening sentence: state your recommendation clearly
  2. 2–3 MOPS paragraphs defending your chosen option
  3. 1 paragraph acknowledging the other option – then explain why your choice is still superior for this business
  4. Conclusion: reaffirm your recommendation and the single strongest reason
Never change your mind mid-answer in a Justify question. Choose in paragraph one and stay committed. The examiner is looking for a clear, well-defended recommendation, not a balanced overview. Balanced overviews are what Evaluate questions want.

Step 5

Calculation questions

Five-step method – always show your working

  1. Write the formula – even if it seems obvious
  2. Substitute the values – show the numbers going in
  3. Work through – show each arithmetic step
  4. State the units – %, £, units of output, etc.
  5. Interpret – one sentence on what the result means for the business

Why show working?

If your final answer is wrong but your method is correct, you still earn method marks. A bare answer with no working earns zero if it is wrong. Always show every step.

Most common errors: using total costs instead of fixed costs in break-even; skipping the variable cost subtraction when finding contribution per unit; forgetting ×100 when calculating a percentage (market share, ARR, ROCE, gearing). Write the formula first – it forces you to check which values to use before substituting.
Worked example

Break-even calculation

  • Formula: Break-even output = Fixed costs ÷ Contribution per unit
  • Contribution: £20 (selling price) − £12 (variable cost) = £8 per unit
  • Substitute: £48,000 ÷ £8 = 6,000 units
  • Interpret: The business must sell 6,000 units before it begins to make a profit. At current forecast sales of 7,500 units, the margin of safety is 1,500 units.

Step 6

Embed context in every paragraph

Why generic answers are capped

Examiners apply a mark band ceiling to answers that could apply to any business. Analysis that references the specific business, its market, its financial position, and its strategic situation is always rewarded more highly than theoretically correct but uncontextualised writing.

  • Use the business name given in the question – never write “a business”
  • Reference specific figures from the data extract (turnover, profit margins, growth rates)
  • Tailor arguments to the business’s size, ownership structure, or stage of development
  • Link to the market: is it price-sensitive? Growing? Highly competitive? Seasonal?
The self-check

After each paragraph, ask one question

Read your paragraph back and ask: “Could this apply to any business?”

If yes, add one sentence that makes it specific to the business in the question. That sentence is frequently the difference between a middle and top mark band.

Paper 3 (synoptic) – use the pre-release material. You receive the case study approximately three weeks before the exam. Spend time annotating key data, identifying strategic themes, and preparing MOPS chains around that specific business. Every piece of evidence from the material that you use in the exam strengthens your analysis.