Improve Business Practice
Improve Business Practice
Improve Business Practice
The fundamental basis of long-run success of a firm is the achievement and maintenance
of a sustainable competitive advantage.
A competitive advantage (hereafter CA) can result either from implementing a value-
creating strategy not simultaneously being employed by current or prospective competitors
or through superior execution of the same strategy as competitors. The CA is sustained
when other firms are unable to duplicate the benefits of this strategy.
1.3. SWOT Analysis of the data is taken
Using SWOT Analysis to Develop a Marketing Strategy
SWOT analysis is a straightforward model that analyzes an organization’s strengths,
weaknesses, opportunities and threats to create the foundation of a marketing strategy.
Step 1
Identify the processes in your businesses that are important for achieving the business goals.
Step 2
Survey your industry and similar industries for the best performers.
Step 3
Establish the benchmarks for each key quantity by choosing the best numbers from each
data pool.
What Is the Difference Between Benchmark Indicators & Key Performance Indicators?
Benchmark indicators and key performance indicators are two measurements that help
companies improve performance. You can set benchmarks and key performance indicators
for individuals, departments, projects or the company as a whole, and use them to measure
everything from manufacturing production to employee performance. Though similar in
some ways, benchmark indicators and key performance indicators are not the same thing.
Benchmark Indicators
Benchmarks are goals to aim for. Other names for benchmarks include best practices and
exemplary practices. Businesses choose benchmarks based on standards within their
industry. For instance, you might look to peak performers in your industry and set their
performance levels in areas such as manufacturing or marketing as your benchmarks --
the levels you will strive to reach.
Benchmarks as Baseline
Another use of the term benchmark is to indicate a baseline or starting point. In this use,
you'd gather information to determine where you are right now and then set further goals
building on that baseline or benchmark.
A. Ease of starting and ending the D. Leaving a legacy behind for future
business generations
B. Being your own boss E. Retention of company profits
C. Pride of ownership F. No special taxes
Types of partnerships
The corporation’s owners (stockholders) are not liable for the debts of the corporation
beyond the money they invest.
A corporation also enables many people to share in the ownership of a business
without working there.
Advantages of corporations
1. Limited liability.
Limited liability is probably the most significant advantage of corporations.
Limited liability means that the owners of a business are responsible for losses
only up to the amount they invest.
2. More money for investment.
To raise money, a corporation sells OWNERSHIP (STOCK) to anyone interested.
Corporations may also find it easier to obtain loans.
Corporations can also raise money from investors through issuing bonds.
3. Size.
Corporations have the ability to raise large amounts of money.
They can also hire experts in all areas of operation.
They can buy other corporations in other fields to diversity their risk.
Corporations have the size and resources to take advantage of opportunities
anywhere in the world.
4. Perpetual life: The death of one or more owners does not terminate the
corporation.
5. Ease of ownership change. Selling stock changes ownership.
6. Ease of drawing talented employees. Corporations can offer benefits such as
stock options.
7. Separation of ownership from management. Corporations can raise money from
investors without getting them involved in management.
Disadvantages of corporations
1. Extensive paperwork.
2. Double taxation.
3. Two tax returns: A corporate owner must file both a corporate tax return and an
individual tax return.
4. Size: Large corporations sometimes become inflexible and too tied down in red
tape.
5. Difficulty of termination.
6. Possible conflict with stockholders and board of directors.
7. Initial cost.
brochures
newsletters (print and/or
electronic)
websites
direct mail
telemarketing/cold calling
LO-5: DEVELOP BUSINESS GROWTH PLANS
5.1. Plans to increase yield (give way) per existing client are developed. Yield per
existing client may be increased by:
raising charge out rates/fees
packaging fees
reduce discounts
sell more services to existing clients
5.2. Plans to add new clients are developed
5.3. Proposed plans are ranked according to agreed criteria
5.4. An action plan to implement the top ranked plans is developed and agree
5.5. Practice work practices are reviewed to ensure they support growth plans.
Steps to develop business growth plans
1. Study the past successes of your company and use this to create new ideas for
future achievements.
2. Look over the business growth plans of various others companies that have
seen great recent success in both your industry as well as other industries.
3. Determine where your expansion opportunities are.
4. Assess your current company employee's efficiency, abilities, and adaptability
as well as your own.
5. Assess your company's current technology and acknowledge any need for
updating operating systems and computer networks to assist and adapt to the
new developments.
6. Create a thorough proposal on how you will raise excess capital to support the
expansion.
7. Generate a high intensity marketing strategy that will catapult your new
development efforts into the population's conscious.
8. Collaborate with a business owner that has successfully expanded his or her
company as you are trying to do.
9. Write your business growth plan. This should include the following:
Explanation of development opportunities.
Financial plans per each quarter as well as yearly.
Marketing strategy you will utilize to accomplish said growth.
Financial breakdown of internal or external capital and its accessibility
throughout the development process.
LO-6: IMPLEMENT AND MONITOR PLANS
What is Monitoring?
Monitoring is the action watching the movement or behavior of something or someone
In plan implementation, monitoring is defined to be the systematic attempt to
measure the extent to which:
1. Results achieved correspond to the set goals and objectives, in terms of quantity,
quality and time standard, and
2. Corrective actions need to be taken in order to reach the intended objectives
EFA Planning Guide (UNESCO) defined monitoring as: “the process and
mechanism of overseeing and Controlling the implementation of a plan, a program,
or a budget in order to assess its efficiency and its effectiveness”
What is Monitoring?
“Monitoring is a continuing function that uses systematic collection of data on
specified indicators to provide management and the main stakeholders of an ongoing
development intervention with indications of the extent of progress and achievement
of objectives and progress in the use of allocated funds”.
• “Monitoring is a continuous management function that aims primarily at providing
programmer managers and key stakeholders with regular feedback and early
indications of progress or lack thereof in the achievement of intended results.
Monitoring tracks the actual performance against what was planned or expected
according to pre-determined standards. It generally involves collecting and analyzing
data on program me processes and results and recommending corrective measures”.
Monitoring Process
• define benchmarks within the implementation process concerning
Inputs (physical, human resources, budget)
Process (progress of work, performance)
Intermediate outputs or results
Development impact
• define objectively verifiable ‘indicators’
What? - How much? - When?
• specify sources of verification
Where are the data (to construct indicators)?
• assess assumptions, conditions, and risks
What are the outside factors?
• specify the reporting system
Who is responsible? – What types of reports?
When is the report due? (Reporting schedule)
What should Monitoring Indicators Cover?
• Quantity of inputs
used
• Quality of inputs
• Efficiency of process
• Effectiveness of
process or impact
• Context
• Input
• Process
• Outputs/Results
• Outcomes/Impact
• Context/Environment
• Internal efficiency
• Effectiveness
• Quality