Business Management

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Mission statement:

a statement of the business’s core aims, phrased in a way to motivate

employees and to stimulate interest by outside groups

Vision statement:

a statement of what the organisation would like to achieve or accomplish

in the long term


Corporate aims: the long term goals which a business hopes to achieve

Divisional/operational objectives:

short- or medium-term goals or

targets – usually specific in nature

– which must be achieved for an

organisation to attain its corporate

aims
Operational objectives should be ‘SMART’

Interlinking aims, objectives and strategies


Divisional, operational objectives are set by senior managers to ensure:
• coordination between all divisions – if they do not work together, the focus of
the organisation will appear confused to outsiders and there will be disagreements
between departments
• consistency with strategic corporate objectives
• adequate resources are provided to allow for the successful achievement of the
objectives.
Strategy: a long-term plan of action for the whole organisation, designed

to achieve a particular goal

Tactic: short-term policy or decision aimed at resolving a particular

problem or meeting a specific part of the overall strategy


Common corporate aims
Profit maximisation
Profits are essential for rewarding investors in a business and for financing further
growth, and are necessary to persuade business owners and entrepreneurs to take
risks.
Profit maximisation means producing at the level of output where the greatest
positive difference between total revenue and total costs is achieved
Profit satisficing
This means aiming to achieve enough profit to keep the owners happy but not aiming

to work flat out to make as much profit as possible. This is often the objective of

owners of small businesses who wish to live comfortably but do not want to work

very long hours in order to earn more profit.


Growth
Larger firms will be less likely to be taken over and should be able to benefit from
economies of scale. Businesses that do not attempt to grow may cease to be competitive
and, eventually, will lose their appeal to new investors. Business objectives based on growth
have limitations:
• Over-rapid expansion can lead to cash flow problems.
• Sales growth might be achieved at the expense of lower profit margins.
• Larger businesses can experience diseconomies of scale.
• Using profits to finance growth – retained profits – can lead to lower short-term
returns to shareholders.
• Growth into new business areas and activities can result in a loss of focus and direction
for the whole organisation.
Increasing market share
Closely linked to overall growth of a business is the market share it enjoys within its
main market. It is possible for an expanding business to suffer a loss of market share if
the market is growing at a faster rate than the business itself. Increasing market share
indicates that the marketing mix of the business is proving to be more successful than
that of its competitors. Benefits resulting from being the brand leader with the highest
market share include:
• Retailers will be keen to stock and promote the best-selling brand.
• Profit margins offered to retailers may be lower than for competing brands as the
shops are so keen to stock it – this leaves more profit for the producer.
• Effective promotional campaigns are often based on ‘buy our product with confidence
it is the brand leader’.
Survival

This is likely to be the key objective of most new business start-ups. The high failure

rate of new businesses means that to survive for the first two years of trading is an

important aim for entrepreneurs. Once the business has become firmly established,

then other longer-term objectives can be established.

Maximising short-term sales revenue

This could benefit managers and staff when salaries and bonuses are dependent on

sales revenue levels. However, if increased sales are achieved by reducing prices, the

actual profits of the business might fall.


Maximising shareholder value
Management, especially in public limited companies, take decisions that
aim to increase the company share price and dividends paid to
shareholders. These targets might be achieved by pursuing the goal of
profit maximisation. This shareholder value objective puts the interests of
shareholders above those of other stakeholders.
Ethical objectives
Ethical objectives are targets based on a moral code for the business – for example,
‘doing the right thing’. The growing acceptance of corporate social responsibility has
led to businesses adopting an ‘ethical code’ to influence the way in which decisions
are taken.

Ethics: moral guidelines that determine decision making

Ethical code (code of conduct): a document detailing a company’s rules and


guidelines on staff behaviour that must be followed by all employees
Most decisions have an ethical or moral dimension. For example:
• Should a toy company advertise products to young children so that they
‘pester’ their parents into buying them?
• Is it acceptable to take bribes in order to place an order with another company?

• Is it acceptable to feed genetically modified food to cattle?


• Is it acceptable to close a factory to save costs and increase profits even though
many jobs will be lost and workers may find it hard to get other jobs?
• If legal controls and inspections are weak in a country, is it acceptable to pay very
low wages for long hours of work since this policy will reduce the firm’s costs?
• Should a business continue to produce potentially dangerous goods as long as ‘no
one finds us out’?
Evaluating ethical objectives
Adopting and keeping to a strict ethical code in decision-making can be expensive in
the short term. For example:
• Using ethical and Fair trade suppliers can add to a business’s costs.
• Not taking bribes to secure business contracts can mean losing out on significant
sales.
• Limiting the advertising of toys and other child-related products to an adult audience
to reduce ‘pester power’ may result in lost sales.
• Accepting that it is wrong to fix prices with competitors might lead to lower prices
and profits.
• Paying fair wages – even in very low-wage economies – raises costs and may
reduce a firm’s competitiveness against businesses that exploit workers.
However, in the long term there could be substantial benefits from acting ethically.
For example:
• Avoiding potentially expensive court cases can reduce costs of fines.
• While bad publicity from being ‘caught’ acting unethically can lead to lost consumer
loyalty and long-term reductions in sales, ethical policies will lead to good publicity
and increased sales.
• Ethical businesses attract ethical customers and, as global pressure grows for
corporate social responsibility, this group of consumers is increasing.
• Ethical businesses are more likely to be awarded government contracts.
• Well-qualified staff may be attracted to work for companies that have ethical and
socially responsible policies.
Corporate social responsibility (CSR)
Objectives that focus on meeting social responsibilities are increasingly important for
most business organisations.
To whom is business answerable? Should business activity be solely concerned with
making profits to meet the objectives of shareholders and investors or should
business decisions also be influenced by the needs of other stakeholders? When a
firm fully accepts its legal and moral obligations to stakeholders other than investors,
it is said to be accepting corporate social responsibility (CSR).

Corporate social responsibility: this concept applies to those businesses that


consider the interests of society by taking responsibility for the impact of their
decisions and activities on customers, employees, communities and the environment
Examples of recent CSR developments include:
• the growth in the number of firms that promote organic and vegetarian foods
• increasing numbers of retailers emphasising the proportion of their products made
from recycled materials
• businesses that refuse to stock goods that have been tested on animals or foods
based on genetically modified ingredients.
In these cases, is the action being taken because trade and reputation might be lost if
it is not or because such action is increasingly profitable? Might businesses be
criticized for paying lip service to CSR rather than praised for their genuine concern
for society and the environment?
The main reasons for changing corporate approaches to social responsibility include:
• increasing publicity from international pressure groups that use the internet to
communicate, blog, raise funds and organise boycotts
• the United Nations Millennium Development Goals, agreed by more than
120 countries in 2000, which includes ‘environmentally sustainable growth’

• global concern over climate change and the impact this could have on social
and economic development – this is forcing companies to confront the climatic
consequences of their actions and investments, e.g. the rapid increase in wind-power
farms in Germany
• legal changes at local, national and European Union level – these have forced
businesses to refrain from certain practices. In most countries, businesses can no
longer pay staff very low wages or avoid legal responsibility for their products.
Measuring CSR
social audits
Social audit: an independent report on the impact a business has on society. This can
cover pollution levels, health and safety record, sources of supplies, customer
satisfaction and contribution to the community
• health and safety record, e.g. number of accidents and fatalities

• contributions to local community events and charities

• proportion of supplies that come from ethical sources, e.g. Fairtrade Foundation

• employee benefit schemes

• feedback from customers and suppliers on how they perceive the ethical nature of

the business’s activities.

The social audit will also contain annual targets to be reached to improve a firm’s level

of social responsibility and details of the policies to be followed to achieve these aims.
Evaluation of social audits

• Until social audits are made compulsory and there is general agreement about what

they should include and how the contents will be verified, some observers will not

take them seriously.

• Companies have been accused of using them as a publicity stunt or a ‘smokescreen’

to hide their true intentions and potentially damaging practices.

• They can be very time-consuming and expensive to produce and publish and this

may make them of limited value to small businesses or those with very limited finance.
Conflicts between corporate objectives

• growth versus profit – achieving higher sales by raising promotional expenditure

and by reducing prices will be likely to reduce short-term profits

• short term versus long term – lower profits and cash flow may need to be accepted

in the short term if managers decide to invest heavily in new technology or the

development of new products that might lead to higher profits in the longer term

• stakeholder conflicts
Factors determining corporate objectives
Corporate culture Size and legal form of the business

Public sector or private sector businesses

Well-established businesses
SWOT analysis: a form of strategic analysis that identifies and analyses the main

internal strengths and weaknesses and external opportunities and threats that will

influence the future direction and success of a business


SWOT can be used to assess:

Competitor analysis,e.g. the threats posed by a rival or the strengths of a competitor.

Assessing opportunities, e.g. the development and growth of the organization.

Risk assessment, e.g. the probable effects of investing in a certain project or location.

Reviewing corporate strategy, e.g. the market position or direction of the business.

Strategic planning, e.g. the decision to diversify or expand overseas.


SWOT evaluation

Subjectivity is often a limitation of a SWOT analysis as no two managers would

necessarily arrive at the same assessment of the company they work for. It is not

a quantitative form of assessment so the ‘cost’ of correcting a weakness cannot be

compared with the potential ‘profit’ from pursuing an opportunity. SWOT should be

used as a management guide for future strategies, not a prescription. Part of the value

of the process of SWOT analysis is the clarification and mutual understanding that

senior managers gain by the focus that SWOT analysis provides.


a) Limited competition in a niche market – this is likely to be an opportunity for
Kidzplay Bouncy Castles. This is because competition is an external factor and since
the business operates in a niche market, there are opportunities for expansion without
the threat of intensive competition.
(b) Limited business on its newly launched website – this might be considered as a
weakness as the factor is, to a large extent, within the control of the business.
Kidzplay Bouncy Castles could take a more proactive approach to the online
promotion its business.
(c) Struggling to recruit suitable staff – again this could be seen as a weakness
because the firm is unable to hire the right staff. Perhaps there is a need for Kidzplay
Bouncy Castles to review its workforce planning and remuneration package.
(d) Demand in the winter months is weak – this might be perceived as a threat since

seasonal fluctuations in demand caused by the weather is beyond the control of the

business. Poor weather during the winter in the UK is likely to dampen the demand for

the services provided by Kidzplay Bouncy Castles.

(e) Highly profitable earnings could attract competitors – this is a potential threat to

the business since competitors are attracted by the high earnings potential. With a

greater number of rivals, Kidzplay Bouncy Castles is likely to lose some market share.
Ansoff’s matrix:

a model used to show the degree of risk associated with the four growth strategies

of: market penetration, market development, product development and

diversification
He considered that the two main variables in a strategic marketing decision are:
• the market in which the firm is going to operate
• the product(s) intended for sale.
In terms of the market, managers have two options:
• to remain in the existing market
• to enter new ones.
In terms of the product, the two options are:
• selling existing products
• developing new ones.
The Ansoff Matrix: Market Penetration
The market penetration strategy can be done in a number of ways:
1.Decreasing prices to attract existing or new customers
2.Increasing promotion and distribution efforts
3.Acquiring a competitor in the same marketplace

For example, telecommunication


companies all cater to the same market
and employ a market penetration strategy
by offering introductory prices and
increasing their promotion and distribution
efforts.
The Ansoff Matrix: Product Development
The product development strategy can be done in a number of ways:
1.Investing in R&D to develop new products to cater to the existing market
1.Acquiring a competitor’s product and merging
resources to create a new product that better
meets the need of the existing market
2.Strategic partnerships with other firms to gain
access to each partner’s distribution channels or
brand
For example, automotive companies are creating
electric cars to meet the changing needs of their
existing market. Current market consumers in the
automobile market are becoming more
environmentally conscious.
The Ansoff Matrix: Market Development
The market development strategy can be done in a number of ways:

1.Catering to a different customer segment

2.Entering into a new domestic market (expanding regionally)

3.Entering into a foreign market

(expanding internationally)

For example, sporting companies such as Nike


and Adidas recently entered the Chinese market
for expansion. The two firms are offering the
same products to a new demographic.
The Ansoff Matrix: Diversification
There are two types of diversification a firm can employ:
1. Related diversification: There are potential synergies to be realized between the
existing business and the new product/market.
For example, a leather shoe producer that starts a line of leather wallets or accessories
is pursuing a related diversification strategy.

2. Unrelated diversification: There are no potential synergies to be realized between


the existing business and the new product/market.
For example, a leather shoe producer that starts manufacturing phones is pursuing an
unrelated diversification strategy.
Evaluation of Ansoff’s matrix
Clearly, the risks involved in these four strategies differ substantially. By opening up

these options, Ansoff’s matrix does not direct a business towards one particular

future strategy. However, by identifying the different strategic areas in which a

business could expand, the matrix allows managers to analyse the degree of risk

associated with each one. Managers can then apply decision-making techniques to

assess the costs, potential gains and risks associated with all options. In practice, it is

common for large businesses, in today’s fiercely competitive world, to adopt multiple

strategies for growth at the same time.


While Ansoff’s analysis helps to map the strategic business options, it has limitations

too. It only considers two main factors in the strategic analysis of a business’s options

– it is important to consider SWOT and STEEPLE (Chapter 1.5) analysis too in order

to give a more complete picture. Recommendations based purely on Ansoff would

tend to lack depth and hard environmental evidence.

Management judgement, especially based on experience of the risks and returns from

the four options, may be just as important as any one analytical tool for making the

final choice.
(a) Market penetration (Cadbury’s trying to capture a larger share of the market) or

product development (new products being launched in existing markets).

(b) Product development (new products by Nissan in an existing market for luxury

cars).

(c) Product development (new products to existing Tesco customers) or diversification

(as Tesco has expanded to provide petrol and financial services which are not part of

its core competencies).

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