Edexcel A-Level Business: Theme 1 - Marketing and People

9BS0/01  ·  Paper 1 (co-assessed with Theme 4)  ·  2 hours  ·  35% of A-Level  ·  Topics 1.1 – 1.5

1.1 - Meeting customer needs

1.1.1  The market

Mass market
Selling a standardised product or service to the whole market, not a specific group. Large sales volumes, lower prices, high competition. Economies of scale are more achievable.
Niche market
Targeting a specific, well-defined segment of the market with a specialised product. Smaller customer base but less direct competition; often allows higher prices.

Dynamic markets: markets are constantly changing due to factors such as changes in consumer tastes and preferences, technological innovation, changes in legislation, new entrants/competitors, and economic conditions. Businesses must adapt their products, marketing strategies, and operations in response.

Online markets
Growth of e-commerce has created new markets and disrupted traditional ones. Businesses can reach global audiences, operate 24/7, and reduce overheads. Increased competition and price transparency.
How competition affects markets
More competitors put downward pressure on prices, force businesses to differentiate, and incentivise innovation. Less competition gives businesses more pricing power and may reduce the incentive to innovate.

Risk
The probability of an outcome can be calculated or estimated from past data. Businesses can plan for risk and potentially insure against it.
Uncertainty
The probability of an outcome cannot be calculated. Caused by unpredictable events such as new technology, political upheaval, and economic shocks. Cannot be insured against. Entrepreneurs must make judgements despite uncertainty.

Risk and uncertainty are often confused. The key distinction is whether probability can be calculated. In an exam, state: risk = quantifiable probability; uncertainty = non-quantifiable.

1.1.2  Market research

Product orientation
Business focuses on making a product it is good at producing, then tries to sell it. Risk: customers may not want it. Historical approach that can work if the product is genuinely innovative.
Market orientation
Business researches what customers want before designing a product to meet those needs. More responsive to customer demand. Reduces risk of product failure. Most modern businesses are market-oriented.

Primary (field) research
Collecting new, first-hand data specifically for the purpose. Methods: surveys, questionnaires, interviews, focus groups, observation, trials. Advantages: up-to-date, specific, confidential. Disadvantages: expensive, time-consuming, risk of bias.
Secondary (desk) research
Using data that already exists. Sources: government statistics, trade journals, competitor reports, internet, internal records (sales data, customer databases). Advantages: cheap, quick, wide scope. Disadvantages: may be outdated, not specific to the firm's needs, publicly available to competitors.

Quantitative data
Numerical data that can be measured and statistically analysed.
Examples: sales figures, percentage of respondents who prefer X, market size in £. Objective and easy to compare, but may miss nuance.
Qualitative data
Data about opinions, feelings, attitudes and motivations.
Examples: focus group discussions, open-ended interview responses. Rich, contextual insight. Harder to analyse and generalise.

Limitations of market research:

Bias
Results distorted by the way questions are phrased (leading questions), who is asked, or the researcher's own assumptions. Reduces validity.
Sample size
Too small a sample may not represent the population. Larger samples are more reliable but more expensive. Representative sampling is key.
Cost and time
Primary research in particular can be expensive. May not be worth the cost for small businesses or quickly changing markets.

Use of ICT in market research: online surveys (low cost, wide reach), social media analytics (real-time data on customer opinions), big data analysis (patterns from large datasets), loyalty card data (purchase behaviour).


Market segmentation: dividing a market into groups with similar characteristics.

Demographic
Dividing the market by measurable population characteristics.
Examples: age, gender, income, education, occupation, family size. Most common segmentation basis.
Geographic
Dividing the market by physical location or geographical factors.
Examples: region, country, urban/rural, climate. Important for businesses operating across multiple locations.
Psychographic
Dividing the market by consumers' psychological characteristics and inner traits.
Examples: lifestyle, values, personality, social class. Allows more targeted marketing.
Behavioural
Dividing the market by how consumers actually interact with a product or brand.
Examples: purchase frequency, brand loyalty, usage rate, benefits sought. Particularly useful for loyalty programmes.

Sampling methods:

Random sampling
Every member of the population has an equal chance of selection. Unbiased. Requires a complete list of the population.
Stratified sampling
Population divided into subgroups (strata); random sample taken from each in proportion to their size. More representative.
Quota sampling
Researcher selects a set number of participants from each subgroup. Cheaper and quicker than stratified, but not truly random.
Convenience/opportunity sampling
Selecting whoever is available. Fast and cheap but highly biased and not representative.

1.1.3  Market positioning

Market mapping: a visual tool that plots competing products/brands on a two-axis grid (e.g. price: low-high vs quality: low-high). Helps identify:

  • Where competitors are positioned
  • Gaps in the market (unoccupied spaces where a new product could succeed)
  • Where a business should position its own product

In an exam question asking you to draw or analyse a market map, remember to label both axes, plot competitors accurately, and identify any market gap. Explain what the gap represents.


Competitive advantage
A factor that allows a business to outperform its rivals. Can be based on lower cost (cost advantage) or differentiated features that justify a premium price (differentiation advantage). Must be sustainable to be valuable.
Product differentiation
Making a product distinct from competitors' offerings in ways that are meaningful to customers. Basis for differentiation: quality, design, features, branding, after-sales service, convenience. Reduces direct price competition.

Adding value: the difference between the selling price of a product and the cost of the inputs used to make it. Ways to add value:

  • Branding: a strong brand commands a premium price
  • Quality: superior quality justifies higher prices and builds loyalty
  • Convenience: saving customers time or effort (e.g. home delivery)
  • Design: aesthetic or functional superiority
  • Customer service: after-sales support, warranties, personal service
  • Unique selling point (USP): a feature competitors do not offer

Adding value is not just about charging more; it is about increasing the gap between price and perceived value for the customer. Questions may ask how a business could "add value": link your answer to specific methods above and the business context given.

1.2 - The market

1.2.1  Demand

Demand: the quantity of a good or service that consumers are willing and able to buy at a given price over a given time period.

The demand curve slopes downward (left to right): as price rises, quantity demanded falls; this is the law of demand. A change in price causes a movement along the demand curve; a change in any other factor causes a shift of the whole curve.


Factors that shift the demand curve:

Income
Rising income shifts demand right for normal goods. Falling income shifts demand left. Inferior goods see demand fall when income rises.
Price of related goods
Substitutes: rise in price of substitute shifts demand right (consumers switch). Complements: rise in price of complement shifts demand left (less use of both together).
Tastes and preferences
Fashion, trends, social attitudes. If a product becomes more fashionable, demand shifts right. Can be influenced by advertising.
Advertising and marketing
Effective advertising creates or increases desire for a product, shifting demand right without a change in price.
Demographics
Changes in population size, age structure, or geographic distribution affect the size and composition of demand.
Expectations
If consumers expect prices to rise, they may buy now (shifting demand right today). If they expect prices to fall, demand may fall in the short term.

1.2.2  Supply

Supply: the quantity of a good or service that producers are willing and able to offer for sale at a given price over a given time period.

The supply curve slopes upward: higher prices make it more profitable to produce, so more is supplied. A change in price causes movement along the curve; other factors cause a shift.


Factors that shift the supply curve:

Costs of production
Rise in costs (wages, raw materials, energy) shifts supply left; less is supplied at each price. Fall in costs shifts supply right.
Technology
Improved production technology reduces costs and increases productivity, shifting supply right.
Number of firms
More producers entering the market increases total supply, shifting the curve right. Exit of firms shifts supply left.
Government policy
Subsidies shift supply right (lower effective costs). Taxes on production shift supply left.
External shocks
Weather, natural disasters, geopolitical events can disrupt supply chains and shift supply left unexpectedly.

1.2.3  Markets

Equilibrium price: the price at which quantity demanded equals quantity supplied; the market clears with no surplus or shortage. On a diagram, it is the intersection of the supply and demand curves.

Surplus (excess supply)
Price is above equilibrium: quantity supplied exceeds quantity demanded. Downward pressure on price; firms cut prices to sell unsold stock.
Shortage (excess demand)
Price is below equilibrium: quantity demanded exceeds quantity supplied. Upward pressure on price; firms raise prices as customers compete for limited supply.

Using supply and demand diagrams: exam questions commonly ask you to show the effect of a specific event. Remember:

  • Label axes: Price (P) on vertical, Quantity (Q) on horizontal
  • Label original curves D₁ and S₁; shifted curves D₂ or S₂
  • Show new equilibrium P₂ and Q₂
  • Explain the direction of shift and why

A common question asks you to draw or describe how a specific event affects price and quantity. Always identify whether demand or supply is affected, then state the direction and the new equilibrium.

1.2.4  Price elasticity of demand (PED)

PED measures the responsiveness of quantity demanded to a change in price.

PED = % change in quantity demanded / % change in price

PED is almost always a negative number (demand and price move in opposite directions); the exam and spec focus on the absolute value |PED|.


ValueLabelMeaning
|PED| > 1Price elasticA 1% price change causes a >1% change in quantity demanded. Demand is relatively sensitive to price.
|PED| < 1Price inelasticA 1% price change causes a <1% change in quantity demanded. Demand is relatively insensitive to price.
|PED| = 1Unitary elasticA 1% price change causes exactly a 1% change in quantity demanded.

Factors influencing PED:

Number and closeness of substitutes
More/closer substitutes make demand more elastic. If a substitute exists, consumers switch when price rises. Fewer substitutes make demand more inelastic.
Necessity vs luxury
Necessities tend to be inelastic; consumers buy them regardless of price changes. Luxuries tend to be more elastic.
Brand loyalty and differentiation
Strong brand loyalty reduces price sensitivity; consumers stick with the brand even if price rises, making demand more inelastic.
Proportion of income spent
Goods taking up a large share of income tend to be more elastic. Small items tend to be inelastic.
Time period
In the short run, demand is often more inelastic as consumers cannot adjust quickly. In the long run, demand becomes more elastic as consumers find alternatives.

Significance of PED for businesses: pricing strategy and total revenue.

Elastic demand: price cut
% rise in Qd > % fall in price, so total revenue increases. Price cuts are beneficial when demand is elastic.
Inelastic demand: price rise
% fall in Qd < % rise in price, so total revenue increases. Price rises are beneficial when demand is inelastic.

Total revenue = Price x Quantity. With elastic demand, price and revenue move in opposite directions. With inelastic demand, price and revenue move in the same direction. This is the most commonly tested aspect of PED.

1.2.5  Income elasticity of demand (YED)

YED measures the responsiveness of quantity demanded to a change in consumer income.

YED = % change in quantity demanded / % change in income

ValueGood typeMeaning
YED > 0Normal goodDemand rises as income rises. Positive relationship between income and demand.
YED > 1Luxury (income elastic)Demand rises proportionally more than income.
Examples: foreign holidays, designer goods.
0 < YED < 1Necessity (income inelastic)Demand rises, but less than in proportion to income.
Examples: bread, bus travel.
YED < 0Inferior goodDemand falls as income rises; consumers switch to superior alternatives.
Examples: own-brand products.

Influences on YED:

Nature of the good
Whether a good is classed as a necessity, luxury, or inferior good is the primary determinant of its YED. Necessities (food staples, utilities) have low positive YED; luxuries have high positive YED; inferior goods have negative YED.
Level of income
At very low income levels, goods that would be luxuries at higher incomes become relative necessities, so YED falls. As average incomes rise, the YED for a given product can change over time.

Significance to firms:

  • Businesses selling luxury goods benefit in economic booms but suffer in recessions.
  • Businesses selling inferior goods may see rising demand in a recession.
  • Knowing YED helps businesses forecast sales during economic cycles and plan capacity and marketing accordingly.

Do not confuse PED and YED. PED: price on the bottom. YED: income (Y) on the bottom. YED can be positive or negative; PED is almost always negative.

1.3 - Marketing mix and strategy

1.3.1  Product / service design

The design mix: the three elements that product design must balance.

Function
The purpose of the product. Does it do what it is supposed to do? Reliability, durability, safety and ease of use.
Aesthetics
The look, feel, smell, sound and taste of the product. Contributes significantly to consumer appeal and willingness to pay a premium.
Economic manufacture
Designing the product so it can be produced cost-efficiently at scale. Reduces unit costs while maintaining acceptable quality.

Changes in the design mix to reflect social trends:

Growing concern over resource depletion
Increasing consumer and regulatory pressure to use sustainable, renewable materials. Businesses responding by redesigning products to use recycled content or materials from certified sustainable sources.
Ethical sourcing
Consumers increasingly demand that materials and components are sourced ethically (fair wages, no child labour, humane conditions). Can command premium prices and build brand loyalty.
Waste minimisation
Designing products and packaging to generate less waste. Biodegradable packaging, reduced packaging. Drives both cost savings and positive brand image.

1.3.2  Branding and promotion

Types of promotion:

Informative promotion
Provides factual information about a product: features, price, availability. Particularly important for new product launches and technical products.
Persuasive promotion
Encourages consumers to buy by appealing to emotions, aspirations, or desire. Used to build preference and loyalty.
Above the line (ATL)
Mass media channels: TV, radio, national newspapers, outdoor billboards. Reaches a large audience but is expensive and less targeted.
Below the line (BTL)
Targeted, direct communication: direct mail, email, social media, point-of-sale displays, sponsorship, PR. More cost-effective for reaching specific segments.

Types of branding:

Manufacturer brands
Created and owned by the producer. Strong identity. Commands premium prices. Requires significant marketing investment.
Own-label / retailer brands
Produced by a manufacturer but sold under the retailer's name (e.g. Tesco Finest, Sainsbury's Basics). Lower price, growing market share.
Generic brands
No branding: plain packaging, emphasises function and low cost. Minimal marketing spend. Appeals to price-conscious consumers.

Ways to build a brand: advertising (consistent message and image), sponsorship (associating brand with events/personalities), celebrity endorsement, quality products and services, distinctive packaging and logo, strong customer service and experience, social media presence.


Benefits of a strong brand:

  • Ability to charge premium prices (demand becomes more price inelastic)
  • Customer loyalty and repeat purchases
  • Easier and cheaper launches of new products (brand extension)
  • Greater bargaining power with retailers and suppliers
  • A source of competitive advantage that is difficult to replicate

Changes in branding to reflect social trends:

Social media marketing and viral marketing
Content shared organically by consumers dramatically increases reach at low cost. Word-of-mouth is amplified through platforms. Influencer marketing has become mainstream.
Emotional branding
Building emotional connections with consumers through storytelling, shared values, and purpose-driven marketing. Reflects growing consumer desire for authentic, values-aligned brands.

1.3.3  Pricing strategies

Cost plus
Calculates total unit cost, then adds a percentage mark-up. Simple to apply; guarantees a profit margin. Does not take account of demand or competitor pricing.
Price skimming
Launch at a high price, then gradually reduce. Recovers R&D costs quickly; targets early adopters willing to pay a premium. Suitable for innovative or technologically new products.
Penetration pricing
Set a low price initially to gain market share quickly. Then raise the price once established. Risk: customers may leave when prices rise.
Predatory pricing
Deliberately setting prices below cost to drive competitors out of the market. Illegal under UK competition law when used by a dominant firm to eliminate rivals; constitutes an abuse of a dominant position. Not sustainable long-term.
Competitive pricing
Setting price at or close to competitors. Common in highly competitive markets with similar products. Avoids price wars.
Psychological pricing
Pricing that exploits consumer perception, e.g. £9.99 feels significantly cheaper than £10. Influences buying decisions through perceived value.

Factors determining appropriate pricing strategy:

  • Costs: price must cover variable costs and contribute to fixed costs in the long run
  • PED: inelastic demand supports price rises; elastic demand rewards price cuts
  • Level of competition: competitive market limits pricing power
  • Strength of brand: strong brand supports higher prices (more inelastic demand)
  • Stage of product life cycle: introduction may use skimming or penetration; mature stage often uses competitive pricing

Social-trend influences on pricing:

  • Online sales: e-commerce has lowered barriers to entry and made it easier for new competitors to enter markets. Increased competition puts downward pressure on prices. Businesses that previously held pricing power in local markets face national and global competitors online.
  • Price comparison websites: consumers can instantly compare prices across many suppliers, making markets more price-transparent and demand more price-elastic. Firms find it harder to charge prices above the market rate and may need to compete on factors other than price (quality, brand, service) to avoid being undercut.

A common question asks you to recommend a pricing strategy. Always link the strategy to the specific context given: the level of competition, whether the product is new or established, and the nature of the target market.

1.3.4  Distribution

Distribution channels: how a product moves from producer to consumer.

Producer to Consumer (direct)
No intermediaries. Producer retains full margin and control over customer experience.
Examples: manufacturer's website, farm shop.
Producer to Retailer to Consumer
One intermediary. Common for branded goods in supermarkets or specialist shops. Retailer adds margin but provides access to existing customer base.
Producer to Wholesaler to Retailer to Consumer
Traditional channel. Wholesaler buys in bulk, breaking bulk for smaller retailers. More stages mean lower margin for producer per unit.

Changes in distribution to reflect social trends:

  • E-commerce growth: many businesses now sell directly online, cutting out intermediaries (disintermediation) and reaching global markets at lower cost
  • Omnichannel retailing: integrating physical stores, websites, apps, and social commerce so customers can buy through multiple touchpoints seamlessly
  • Direct-to-consumer (DTC): brands bypassing retailers entirely to sell via own websites or subscription services, retaining more margin and customer data

1.3.5  Marketing strategy

Product life cycle (PLC):

Introduction
Product launched. Low sales, high costs (R&D, marketing). Often a net loss. Marketing: informative advertising to create awareness.
Growth
Sales rising rapidly. Break-even reached. Competitors begin to enter. Marketing: persuasive advertising; begin to differentiate from new competitors.
Maturity
Sales peak. Market is saturated. Highest competition. Focus shifts to defending market share. Cash flows are strongest.
Decline
Sales fall due to changing tastes, better substitutes, or technological change. Business must decide whether to extend, harvest, or withdraw.

Extension strategies: actions taken to prevent or delay decline.

  • Product updates or modifications (new formula, added features)
  • Targeting new markets (geographic expansion, new demographic)
  • New uses for the existing product
  • Rebranding or new packaging
  • Price reduction to attract new customers
  • Increased promotional spend

The Boston Matrix: analyses a business's product portfolio using market share and market growth rate.

Star
High market share, high market growth. Profitable but requires significant investment to maintain position. Likely to become a cash cow as growth slows.
Cash cow
High market share, low market growth. Generates strong cash flows with relatively low investment; funds development of other products.
Question mark (Problem child)
Low market share, high market growth. Uncertain future: could become a star with investment, or a dog if it fails. Strategic decision required.
Dog
Low market share, low market growth. Likely generating little cash. Usually candidates for withdrawal unless they serve a niche or strategic purpose.

Advantages and disadvantages of the Boston Matrix:

Advantages
  • Gives a clear visual overview of the entire product portfolio
  • Helps managers allocate resources: invest in Stars, harvest Cash Cows, make decisions on Question Marks
  • Simple and quick to apply; easy to communicate to stakeholders
  • Encourages businesses to maintain a balanced portfolio
Disadvantages
  • Only uses two dimensions (market share and growth); ignores profitability, cash flow, and competitive intensity
  • Market share and market growth can be difficult to measure accurately
  • Oversimplifies strategic decisions; a Dog may still be profitable or strategically important
  • Does not show how to move a product between categories

Marketing strategies for different markets:

Mass market strategy
Standardised product for all consumers. High volume, lower prices, economies of scale. Relies on broad ATL advertising.
Niche market strategy
Tailored product for a specific segment. Higher prices, smaller volume, premium positioning. Relies on targeted BTL communication and specialist knowledge.
B2B (Business-to-Business)
Selling to other businesses. Rational, value-based decisions. Long relationships, contracts, and account management. Less focus on emotional appeal.
B2C (Business-to-Consumer)
Selling directly to end consumers. Emotional and rational influences. Wider use of ATL/BTL advertising, loyalty schemes, and branding.

Customer loyalty: creating and maintaining loyal customers through loyalty reward schemes; consistently high quality products and service; strong after-sales support; personalised communications; building a strong emotional connection to the brand.

The Boston Matrix is a planning tool, not a prediction. Categorise a product using the business context, then recommend a strategy (invest, harvest, divest, develop) and justify it. Avoid simply labelling without analysis.

1.4 - Managing people

1.4.1  Approaches to staffing

Staff as an asset
View that employees are a valuable resource worth investing in. Businesses invest in training, career development, and good working conditions to retain skilled staff and increase productivity.
Staff as a cost
View that labour is a cost to be minimised. Leads to strategies such as outsourcing, use of zero-hours or temporary contracts, minimal training, and automation. May reduce costs in the short term but risks reducing morale and productivity.

Flexible workforce: adapting the workforce to match business needs.

Multi-skilling
Training employees to carry out a variety of tasks. Increases flexibility and reduces dependency on individuals.
Part-time and temporary contracts
Match labour supply to demand fluctuations. Lower fixed costs. Risk: less commitment from workers.
Zero-hours contracts
Employer is not obliged to offer any hours; worker is not obliged to accept. Maximum flexibility for employer. Insecurity and unpredictable income for worker.
Remote and home working
Advances in technology enable work from any location. Reduces premises costs. Can improve work-life balance and attract talent.
Outsourcing
Contracting specific functions or activities to external specialist firms rather than employing permanent in-house staff. Common for IT, payroll, cleaning, and customer service. Reduces fixed labour costs and accesses specialist expertise. Risk: loss of control over quality; dependence on the third party.

Dismissal
Termination of employment because the employee is at fault, e.g. misconduct, poor performance, gross negligence. Employee is personally responsible. Legal process must be followed; unfair dismissal claims are possible.
Redundancy
The job role itself is no longer needed, not the individual's fault. Caused by restructuring, automation, falling demand. Statutory redundancy pay may apply. Can affect morale of remaining staff.

Employer/employee relations: the quality of relationships between management and the workforce. Effective communication, consultation, and fair treatment promote trust and productivity. Poor relations lead to high labour turnover, absenteeism, low morale, and potential industrial action.

Individual approach
The employer deals directly with each employee on an individual basis - negotiating pay, conditions, and grievances one-to-one. Each employee has their own contract. Common in smaller businesses or for senior/specialist roles. Advantage: flexible and responsive to individual circumstances. Risk: weaker protection for employees with less bargaining power.
Collective bargaining
Employees negotiate collectively through a trade union that represents the group. The union agrees terms on pay, hours, and working conditions on behalf of all its members. A resulting deal is a collective agreement. Gives employees greater bargaining power. Advantage: consistent terms for all workers; reduced risk of exploitation. Risk: negotiations can break down, leading to industrial action.
Trade unions
Organisations that represent the collective interests of workers. They negotiate with employers on pay, hours, and working conditions through collective bargaining. Unions can also call industrial action (e.g. strikes, work-to-rule) if negotiations fail.
Industrial action
Strike: employees refuse to work, causing production to halt. Work-to-rule: employees do only the minimum required by their contract, reducing output. Overtime ban: refusal to work beyond contracted hours. Industrial action can be costly for both business (lost output, reputation) and employees (lost wages).

1.4.2  Recruitment, selection and training

Internal recruitment
Promoting or transferring existing employees. Cheaper and faster; employee knows the business culture. Limits fresh perspectives; may cause resentment if others feel overlooked. Creates a vacancy to fill elsewhere.
External recruitment
Hiring from outside the organisation. Wider talent pool; brings in new ideas and skills. More expensive (advertising, agency fees, longer induction period).

Costs of recruitment, selection and training: job advertising; interviewer time; aptitude testing/assessment centres; lost productivity during vacancy; induction costs; training time and materials; mentor/supervisor time.


Selection methods: application forms and CVs (screening); interviews (face-to-face or panel); aptitude and psychometric tests; work-based tasks/trials; assessment centres (multiple exercises over a day).


Types of training:

Induction training
Introduction for new employees: company culture, health and safety, roles and responsibilities, key processes. Reduces early mistakes. All new staff require it.
On-the-job training
Learning while doing, supervised by an experienced colleague (job shadowing, mentoring, coaching). Job-specific, lower cost. May pass on bad habits. Productivity may be lost during training.
Off-the-job training
External training away from the workplace: college courses, professional qualifications, workshops. Broader skills; qualified trainers. More expensive; staff absent from work during training.

1.4.3  Organisational design

Hierarchy
The vertical levels of authority in an organisation, shown on an organisational chart. Each level has a different degree of responsibility and authority.
Chain of command
The path through which authority and instructions flow downward, and information flows upward. A longer chain can slow communication.
Span of control
The number of subordinates a manager directly supervises. Wide span (many subordinates): cost-efficient, less supervision. Narrow span (few subordinates): more supervision, better control, but more managers needed and therefore more expensive.
Centralised vs decentralised
Centralised: decisions made at the top. Consistent, controlled, faster strategic decisions. Less autonomy for local branches. Decentralised: decision-making authority delegated to lower levels. More responsive to local needs; improves motivation. Risk of inconsistency.

Types of organisational structure:

Tall (hierarchical)
Many levels, narrow spans of control. Close supervision. Slow communication. More expensive due to many managers.
Flat
Few levels, wide spans of control. Faster communication. Employees have more autonomy. Managers are responsible for more people.
Matrix
Project-based teams drawing from different functional departments. Flexible, encourages cross-functional collaboration. Dual reporting can cause confusion.

Delayering: removing one or more levels of management from the hierarchy. Effects: reduced costs; flatter, faster-communicating structure; employees gain more responsibility (can motivate); risk of overloading remaining managers; may lead to redundancies and short-term disruption.

When evaluating organisational structure in an exam, consider the context: a small start-up suits a flat structure; a large multinational may need a tall, hierarchical one. Link structure choice to the business's size, strategy, and culture.

1.4.4  Motivation in theory and practice

Importance of motivation: motivated employees work harder, are more productive, take fewer sick days, are less likely to leave (lower labour turnover), and provide better customer service.


Motivation theories:

Taylor - scientific management
Workers are primarily motivated by money. Managers should study the most efficient way to do a task (time and motion studies), then pay workers per unit produced (piecework). Workers are rational economic beings.

Criticism: treats workers as machines; ignores social and psychological needs; can lead to monotonous, de-humanising work.
Mayo - human relations
Workers are motivated by social factors: belonging, recognition, being listened to. The Hawthorne studies showed that when workers were observed and consulted, productivity rose regardless of physical conditions.

Implication: teamwork, communication and management attention are key motivators.
Maslow - hierarchy of needs
Five levels of need (physiological, safety, love/belonging, esteem, self-actualisation). Lower needs must be satisfied before higher ones motivate. Once a need is met, it no longer motivates; the next level becomes important.

Implication: managers must identify each employee's current level and address that need.
Herzberg - two-factor theory
Hygiene factors (pay, working conditions, company policy, supervision): if inadequate, they cause dissatisfaction, but improving them does not motivate; they merely prevent dissatisfaction.
Motivators (achievement, recognition, responsibility, advancement, the work itself): these genuinely motivate and increase job satisfaction.

Implication: job enrichment (adding more meaningful, challenging work) is the key to motivation.

Financial incentives:

Piecework
Pay per unit produced. Directly links effort to reward. Risk: may sacrifice quality for quantity.
Commission
Percentage of the value of sales made. Motivates sales staff to sell more. Earnings can be unpredictable.
Bonus
Extra payment when a target is achieved. One-off reward. Can motivate short-term effort but may not sustain long-term motivation.
Profit share
Employees receive a share of company profits. Links individual reward to overall business performance. Builds a sense of ownership.
Performance-related pay (PRP)
Pay increases linked to appraisal results. Rewards individual performance. Can be difficult to apply fairly; may encourage competition over collaboration.

Non-financial techniques:

Delegation
Passing authority for a task to a subordinate. Shows trust, develops skills, and frees up managers for more strategic work.
Consultation
Seeking employees' input before decisions are made. Employees feel valued and respected.
Empowerment
Giving employees greater autonomy and control over their own work. Increases responsibility and job satisfaction.
Teamworking
Organising employees into teams. Meets social needs (Mayo); encourages collaboration and knowledge sharing.
Flexible working
Arrangements such as flexitime, compressed hours, or remote working that allow employees to vary when and where they work. Improves work-life balance and can boost morale.
Job enrichment
Adding more challenging, meaningful tasks to a role (vertical extension). Addresses Herzberg's motivators.
Job rotation
Moving between different tasks at the same level. Adds variety and reduces monotony.
Job enlargement
Adding more tasks at the same level (horizontal extension). Broader role without greater responsibility.

A motivation question will usually ask you to apply a theory to a specific context. Link the theory clearly: e.g. if workers need recognition, apply Mayo or Maslow's esteem level. Then evaluate whether the recommended technique will work given the context.

1.4.5  Leadership

Management
The process of planning, organising, and coordinating resources to achieve defined objectives. Administrative and process-focused. Manages existing tasks and systems.
Leadership
The ability to inspire, influence, and motivate others towards a shared vision. People-focused and forward-looking. Leaders create the conditions for change and innovation.

Leadership styles:

Autocratic
Leader makes all decisions alone, with no consultation. Issues instructions and expects compliance.

Advantages: fast decisions; clear direction; effective in a crisis.
Disadvantages: demotivating; reduces employee initiative; not suitable for creative tasks.
Paternalistic
Leader consults employees and considers their wellbeing, but still makes the final decision ("father knows best").

Advantages: considers employee welfare; some consultation improves morale.
Disadvantages: can be patronising; employees' input may be ignored.
Democratic
Employees actively participate in decision-making processes. Leader facilitates discussion and takes majority views into account.

Advantages: high motivation and buy-in; benefits from diverse ideas; employees develop skills.
Disadvantages: slower decisions; not practical in a crisis.
Laissez-faire
Minimal supervision; employees are largely free to make their own decisions. Leader provides resources and support but does not direct.

Advantages: high autonomy; suited to highly skilled or creative teams.
Disadvantages: risky if employees lack expertise or motivation; lack of direction.

Leadership style questions often include a case study with contextual clues. Match the style to the situation: autocratic for crisis/emergency; democratic for complex, creative projects; laissez-faire for expert, self-motivated teams. Always evaluate in context rather than stating one style is universally best.

1.5 - Entrepreneurs and leaders

1.5.1  Role of an entrepreneur

Entrepreneurs create and run businesses, taking on financial and personal risk in return for potential reward. Their roles include:

Creating and setting up a business
Identifying a gap in the market or a consumer need; organising land, labour and capital resources; establishing the business legally and operationally.
Running and expanding a business
Managing day-to-day operations; making strategic decisions; identifying opportunities for growth (new products, markets).
Innovation
Introducing new products, services, processes, or business models to create value. Intrapreneurship: entrepreneurial behaviour and innovation by employees within an existing organisation.

Barriers to entrepreneurship: lack of start-up finance; limited business experience; competition from established businesses; regulatory and legal complexities; fear of failure; lack of a clear market opportunity.


Anticipating risk and uncertainty:

Risk (entrepreneurial)
Quantifiable probability of outcomes, e.g. a new business has a statistically calculable chance of failure. Entrepreneurs accept and manage risk.
Uncertainty (entrepreneurial)
Outcomes that cannot be reliably estimated, such as future market conditions or customer reactions to a new product. Entrepreneurs must make judgement calls despite uncertainty.

1.5.2  Entrepreneurial motives and characteristics

Characteristics and skills required: innovation and creativity; willingness to take calculated risks; determination and resilience; vision and strategic thinking; leadership and communication; problem-solving and decision-making; financial literacy.


Financial motives for setting up a business:

Profit maximisation
The goal of achieving the highest possible level of profit, maximising the gap between total revenue and total costs. Primary goal for shareholders in a PLC.
Profit satisficing
Achieving a satisfactory level of profit: enough to meet stakeholder expectations and sustain the business, rather than the maximum possible. Common among lifestyle entrepreneurs and owner-managers.

Non-financial motives:

Ethical stance
Running a business according to personal values, e.g. fair trade, environmental responsibility, animal welfare. May involve accepting lower profits.
Social entrepreneurship
Creating a business primarily to achieve a social or environmental objective. Profit is a means to achieve the mission, not an end in itself. Example: The Big Issue.
Independence
Being one's own boss: freedom from corporate hierarchy, flexible working, control over decisions. A powerful non-financial motivator, especially for sole traders.
Home working / work-life balance
Setting up a home-based business to achieve greater flexibility and reduce commuting. Increasingly viable due to digital technology.

1.5.3  Business objectives

Survival
Priority objective for new businesses or those facing a crisis (e.g. recession, market disruption). May require accepting low or zero profits in the short term.
Profit maximisation
Maximising the difference between total revenue and total costs. Primary goal for shareholder-owned businesses; key signal of business health.
Sales maximisation
Maximising revenue regardless of short-term profitability. Used to build market share; may be funded by investors or subsidised by other products.
Market share
Increasing the proportion of total market sales that the business holds. Proxy for competitive strength.
Cost efficiency
Reducing unit costs to improve margins and price competitiveness. Enabled by economies of scale, process improvement, or technology.
Employee welfare
Ensuring employees have good working conditions, fair pay, career development and wellbeing. Reduces labour turnover and improves productivity.
Customer satisfaction
Meeting or exceeding customer expectations on quality, service, and value. Drives repeat business and positive word-of-mouth.
Social objectives
Benefiting the wider community or environment. Common in social enterprises and companies with strong CSR (corporate social responsibility) programmes.

Business objectives change over time and with circumstances. A start-up prioritises survival; a growing business may target market share; a mature business may focus on profit maximisation. Questions often ask how and why objectives evolve.

1.5.4  Forms of business

Sole trader
One owner who runs the business personally. Easiest and cheapest to set up. Owner keeps all profits.

Key feature: unlimited liability; owner's personal assets are at risk if business debts cannot be paid. No legal distinction between owner and business.
Partnership
Two or more owners share responsibility, costs and profits. Governed by a partnership deed if one exists; otherwise the Partnership Act 1890 applies. Wider range of skills and capital than sole trader.

Key feature: unlimited liability (unless a Limited Liability Partnership is formed). Disagreements between partners can be problematic.
Private limited company (Ltd)
Separate legal entity from its owners. Shares can only be sold privately with the agreement of all shareholders.

Key feature: limited liability; shareholders' risk is limited to their investment. More complex and expensive to set up. Owners retain control.
Franchising
The franchisor grants the franchisee the right to trade using the franchisor's brand, products, and systems in exchange for fees and/or royalties.

Franchisee: lower risk (proven model), less autonomy. Franchisor: rapid expansion without full capital outlay, but less direct control over quality.
Social enterprise
Business with a primary social, environmental, or community objective. Profits are reinvested into the mission rather than distributed to shareholders. Example: The Big Issue.
Public limited company (PLC)
Shares sold to the general public via the stock market (flotation/IPO). Separate legal entity; limited liability for shareholders.

Advantages: access to large amounts of capital for growth; increased public profile.
Disadvantages: loss of control (shareholders can vote out directors); increased regulatory burden; short-term pressure from investors; risk of hostile takeover.

Note - business types by objective (not legal forms): the following are not separate legal structures but describe the goals or operating model of a business:

Lifestyle business
Provides the owner with a desired lifestyle rather than aiming for significant growth. Prioritises work-life balance and personal satisfaction over profit maximisation. Typically operates as a sole trader or partnership.
Online business
Operates primarily or entirely through digital channels. Lower overhead costs (no physical premises required). Global reach from day one. Can be any legal form. Dependent on technology infrastructure; highly competitive.

1.5.5  Business choices

Opportunity cost: the value of the next best alternative foregone when a decision is made. Every business decision involves a trade-off; choosing one option means giving up the benefits of another.

  • A business that invests cash in new machinery forgoes the opportunity to invest in marketing or staff training
  • An entrepreneur who chooses to keep a business as a sole trader forgoes the benefits of taking on a partner (more capital, shared risk)
  • Setting a penetration price means forgoing the short-term revenue that a skimming price would generate

Opportunity cost underpins much of business decision-making. In an exam, when evaluating a business choice, always acknowledge what is being given up (this is the opportunity cost) and weigh it against the benefits of the decision made.

1.5.6  Moving from entrepreneur to leader

As a business grows, the founder can no longer manage every aspect personally. The transition from entrepreneur to leader requires significant changes in approach:

Delegating authority
Moving from doing everything personally to trusting others with tasks and decisions. Requires building a capable team and developing trust.
Shifting focus
From operational (day-to-day) tasks to strategic (long-term direction) thinking. Entrepreneurs who remain too hands-on can become a bottleneck to growth.
Building and leading a team
Recruiting managers and specialists for areas beyond the founder's expertise (finance, HR, operations). Developing leadership skills: communication, vision, inspiration.
Changing the business culture
Early-stage entrepreneurial culture (fast, informal, risk-taking) must evolve into a more structured culture as the business scales. Balancing innovation with process and governance.

The key distinction remains: entrepreneurs create and take risks; leaders inspire and direct others to achieve a shared vision. A successful business requires both qualities, but at different times in the business life cycle.