Your Complete IGCSE
Business Studies Companion
Comprehensive notes, key definitions, worked examples, exam tips, and interactive quizzes for all 18 topics. Everything you need to ace your exam.
Appropriateness of Different Forms of Ownership
Understanding the legal structures businesses can take — from sole traders to public limited companies — and knowing which form suits which situation is essential for IGCSE Business.
| Feature | Sole Trader | Partnership | Private Ltd (Ltd) | PLC |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Owners | 1 | 2–20 | 1+ | Many (shareholders) |
| Liability | Unlimited | Unlimited | Limited | Limited |
| Capital raised | Low | Medium | Medium-High | Very High |
| Decision-making | Very fast | Shared | Directors | Board of Directors |
| Privacy | High | High | Medium | Low (public accounts) |
| Setup ease | Very easy | Easy | Moderate | Complex |
| Continuity | No | No | Yes | Yes |
| Profit sharing | Owner keeps all | Shared by partners | Dividends to shareholders | Dividends to shareholders |
Sole Trader
Best for: Small, local businesses (plumbers, hairdressers, market stalls)
- Easy and cheap to set up — no formal registration needed
- Owner makes all decisions — fast and flexible
- All profits go to owner after tax
- Risk: Unlimited liability — can lose home/savings
- Business may end if owner retires/dies
Partnership
Best for: Professional services (law firms, accountants, doctors)
- Shared capital means more money to start/expand
- Shared workload and specialisation
- Still unlimited liability (unless LLP — Limited Liability Partnership)
- Risk: Disagreements between partners can harm business
- Deed of Partnership sets out profit split and responsibilities
Private Limited Company (Ltd)
Best for: Growing businesses wanting protection and investment
- Limited liability protects personal assets
- Can sell shares to friends/family to raise capital
- Must file annual accounts at Companies House
- Cannot sell shares to the public on a stock exchange
- Separate legal identity from owners
Public Limited Company (PLC)
Best for: Large corporations needing massive capital
- Can raise huge capital by selling shares on stock exchange
- Risk spread among thousands of shareholders
- Subject to rigorous regulation and scrutiny
- Accounts must be published publicly
- Risk of hostile takeover by buying shares
Franchise
Best for: Entrepreneurs who want lower-risk startup
- Franchisee buys the right to use a proven brand
- Franchisor provides training, marketing, products
- Less risk — proven business model
- Franchisee pays royalties (% of revenue) to franchisor
- Less freedom — must follow franchisor's rules
Cooperative
Best for: Community-focused or worker-owned businesses
- All members have equal say (one member, one vote)
- Profits shared equally among members
- Often focused on social objectives over profit
- Examples: Retail Co-ops, Credit Unions
- Can struggle to raise capital
Exam Tips for Topic 1
- Always justify your answer — don't just name a form of ownership; explain WHY it suits that business (e.g., "An Ltd is appropriate because the owner wants limited liability while raising capital from family members").
- Know the difference between Ltd and PLC — this is a very common exam question. Key: PLCs can sell on stock exchange, Ltd cannot.
- Unlimited vs Limited liability is ALWAYS relevant — mention it when discussing any ownership question.
- Franchise questions often ask for both franchisor AND franchisee benefits — prepare both sides.
- Context matters — always read the case study carefully and match the form of ownership to the business described.
🧠 Topic 1 Quiz
Classification of Businesses
Businesses are classified by the type of activity they carry out. Understanding the three sectors of industry — and why businesses move between them — is a core IGCSE concept.
🌾 Primary Sector
Examples: Farms, oil rigs, mines, fishing fleets, forestry companies
- Provides raw materials for all other sectors
- Often labour-intensive in developing countries
- Subject to natural factors (weather, seasons)
- Declining share of GDP in developed countries
🏗️ Secondary Sector
Examples: Car manufacturers, steel mills, clothing factories, construction firms
- Adds value by converting raw materials into goods
- Typically capital-intensive (heavy machinery)
- Declining in many developed economies (de-industrialisation)
- Growing in emerging economies (China, India)
🛒 Tertiary Sector
Examples: Banks, hospitals, schools, restaurants, shops, airlines
- Provides services (intangible products)
- Fastest growing sector in developed countries
- Includes financial services, retail, education, healthcare
- Often knowledge and people-intensive
Why Businesses Change Sectors
- Technological advancement reduces need for manual primary/secondary work
- Rising living standards increase demand for services (tertiary)
- Globalisation means manufacturing moves to lower-cost countries
- Automation replaces factory workers, shifting employment to services
| Feature | Public Sector | Private Sector |
|---|---|---|
| Ownership | Government | Private individuals / companies |
| Main objective | Provide services to all citizens | Make profit |
| Funding | Taxes | Revenue / investment |
| Examples | NHS, state schools, police | Tesco, Apple, local shops |
| Competition | Usually monopoly | Usually competitive market |
Exam Tips for Topic 2
- Always give a specific example when naming a sector — don't just say "primary sector," say "a farm producing wheat."
- De-industrialisation questions are common — know why it happens (automation, globalisation) and its effects (unemployment in manufacturing areas).
- Chain of production questions may ask you to place businesses in the correct sector — trace the product from raw material to consumer.
- Public vs Private sector — remember public = government, private = owned by individuals. Don't confuse "public sector" with PLC (a public company is still in the private sector!).
🧠 Topic 2 Quiz
Multinational Companies (MNCs)
A multinational company operates in more than one country. Understanding why MNCs grow, their impacts on host countries, and how to evaluate them is vital for IGCSE Business.
Lower Costs
Cheaper labour, land, and raw materials in other countries reduce production costs significantly (e.g. manufacturing in Vietnam).
New Markets
Access to millions of new customers in growing economies — especially BRIC nations (Brazil, Russia, India, China).
Avoid Trade Barriers
By setting up inside a country, MNCs avoid import tariffs and quotas that would apply to goods shipped in.
Tax Advantages
Some countries offer lower corporation tax rates to attract foreign investment. MNCs may use tax havens.
Natural Resources
Access to resources not available in home country (oil, minerals, agricultural land).
Economies of Scale
Operating at a larger global scale reduces average costs per unit further.
| Benefits to Host Country | Drawbacks to Host Country |
|---|---|
| Jobs created for local workers | Profits sent back to home country (repatriation) |
| Technology and skills transferred | Local competitors may be driven out of business |
| Government earns tax revenue | Environmental damage (lower standards exploited) |
| Infrastructure development (roads, facilities) | Low wages / poor working conditions possible |
| Increased exports from host country | Dependence on a single large employer |
| Higher living standards | Cultural erosion (local businesses/culture replaced) |
Exam Tips for Topic 3
- Always evaluate both sides — MNC questions almost always ask for benefits AND drawbacks. Don't just list one side.
- Context is key — consider whether the host country is developed or developing, as this changes the impact.
- Named examples gain marks — mention real MNCs like Nike, Apple, Toyota, or Unilever when explaining concepts.
- Profit repatriation is the most common drawback to mention — money leaves the host country's economy.
- Distinguish between the home country and host country clearly in your answers.
🧠 Topic 3 Quiz
International Trade & Exchange Rates
International trade allows countries to specialise in what they produce best. Exchange rates determine how expensive it is for businesses and consumers to buy goods from other countries.
Worked Example — Exchange Rate Calculation
If £1 = $2 and a UK product costs £500:
- Price in $ = £500 × 2 = $1,000
- If £ depreciates to £1 = $1.50: Price = £500 × 1.50 = $750 (cheaper for US buyers → more competitive)
- If £ appreciates to £1 = $2.50: Price = £500 × 2.50 = $1,250 (more expensive → less competitive)
| Barrier | Definition | Effect |
|---|---|---|
| Tariff | Tax on imports | Raises price of imports; protects domestic firms |
| Quota | Limit on import quantity | Limits supply of foreign goods |
| Embargo | Complete ban on trade with a country | Total restriction (e.g. sanctions) |
| Subsidy | Government payment to domestic producers | Lowers domestic costs; makes foreign goods relatively expensive |
| Regulations | Strict product standards, labelling rules | Makes it harder for foreign firms to comply and enter market |
Benefits
- Access to larger markets = more customers
- Can specialise in what the country produces efficiently
- Consumers get access to greater variety of goods
- Lower prices through competition and specialisation
- Creates jobs in export industries
Drawbacks
- Domestic industries face intense foreign competition
- Job losses in industries unable to compete
- Dependence on foreign supply chains (fragile)
- Exchange rate fluctuations create uncertainty
- Trade disputes and political tensions
Exam Tips for Topic 4
- Exchange rate calculations are common — always multiply exports by the rate, and check if it makes exports cheaper or more expensive abroad.
- Strong pound = bad for exporters, good for importers — this is a classic exam trick question.
- Remember the mnemonic SPICED: Strong Pound — Imports Cheap, Exports Dear.
- Trade barrier questions often ask you to recommend ONE and justify — tariffs are most common to discuss.
- When discussing benefits of free trade, always link to lower prices for consumers and increased specialisation.
🧠 Topic 4 Quiz
External Factors (PEST Analysis)
Businesses are affected by forces outside their control. PEST analysis identifies Political, Economic, Social, and Technological factors. Some syllabuses extend to PESTLE (adding Legal and Environmental).
🏛️ Political Factors
- Government policies (tax rates, minimum wage)
- Trade policies (tariffs, free trade agreements)
- Political stability or instability
- Government spending priorities
- Nationalisation / privatisation policies
📈 Economic Factors
- Interest rates (affects borrowing costs)
- Inflation rates (affects purchasing power)
- Economic growth / recession
- Unemployment levels (affects consumer spending)
- Exchange rates (affects import/export competitiveness)
👥 Social Factors
- Demographic changes (ageing population)
- Changing tastes and lifestyles
- Education levels of workforce
- Health consciousness trends
- Urbanisation and population growth
💻 Technological Factors
- Automation and robotics
- E-commerce and online platforms
- Social media marketing
- New manufacturing processes
- AI and data analytics
| External Factor | Example Impact | Business Response |
|---|---|---|
| Rise in interest rates | Higher loan repayments | Delay expansion plans, reduce borrowing |
| Ageing population | More demand for healthcare/leisure | Develop products for older consumers |
| New technology | Online shopping grows | Invest in e-commerce platform |
| Rising minimum wage | Labour costs increase | Automate processes, raise prices |
| Recession | Consumer spending falls | Cut costs, offer budget products |
Exam Tips for Topic 5
- Link every factor to business impact — don't just say "interest rates rose," say "interest rates rose, increasing the cost of borrowing, so the business delayed its expansion."
- Use the specific factor name (e.g. "this is an Economic factor") to show examiner you understand the framework.
- Two-sided answers score higher — a change in interest rates can be good (cheaper for consumers to borrow and spend) AND bad (worse for the business borrowing for investment).
- Distinguish PEST from SWOT — PEST is external only. SWOT includes internal (Strengths, Weaknesses) + external (Opportunities, Threats).
🧠 Topic 5 Quiz
Measuring Business Success
Success means different things to different businesses. It can be measured financially (profit, revenue) or non-financially (market share, customer satisfaction, sustainability goals).
Profit & Revenue
- Most obvious financial indicator
- Gross Profit = Revenue − Cost of Sales
- Net Profit = Gross Profit − Expenses
- Rising profit = business performing well
- Profit margin shows efficiency
Return on Capital (ROC)
- Measures how efficiently capital is being used
- ROC = (Net Profit ÷ Capital Employed) × 100
- Higher % = more efficient use of investment
- Compared to bank interest rates to evaluate
Market Share
- Shows competitive position in the market
- Growing market share = outperforming rivals
- Large market share → economies of scale
- Can be measured in value or volume
| Measure | What it Shows | Why it Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Customer satisfaction | Loyalty and repeat business potential | Repeat customers are cheaper to retain than acquiring new ones |
| Employee turnover | Staff retention and morale | High turnover = costly recruitment and training |
| Brand recognition | Awareness and reputation in market | Strong brand = competitive advantage |
| Environmental impact | CSR and sustainability performance | Increasingly important to consumers and regulators |
| Staff absenteeism | Worker wellbeing and productivity | High absenteeism reduces output and raises costs |
Exam Tips for Topic 6
- Always define your measure clearly before discussing it — "Market share is a firm's sales as a percentage of total industry sales."
- Context determines the best measure — a charity's success ≠ profit. Match the measure to the type of organisation.
- Calculate where possible — if data is given, calculate market share or profit margin to support your answer.
- Limitations of profit as sole measure are often asked — link to sustainability, stakeholder wellbeing, long-term reputation.
- SMART objectives may appear — practice applying the framework to given business scenarios.
🧠 Topic 6 Quiz
Barriers to Communication in Business
Effective communication is essential for business success. Barriers prevent messages from being received and understood correctly, leading to mistakes, conflict, and inefficiency.
Physical / Environmental
- Noise disrupting face-to-face communication
- Geographic distance between offices/countries
- Poor phone/internet connections
- Uncomfortable or crowded workspaces
Language Barriers
- Different native languages in multinational firms
- Use of jargon or technical terms
- Slang and regional dialects
- Complex vocabulary unfamiliar to receiver
Cultural Differences
- Different cultural norms (eye contact, formality)
- Different attitudes to hierarchy and authority
- Misinterpretation of non-verbal cues (gestures)
- Different expectations in business meetings
Organisational Barriers
- Too many layers of management (long chain of command)
- Filtering — information changed as it passes through levels
- Poor choice of communication channel
- Lack of feedback mechanisms
Personal / Emotional
- Stress or emotional state affecting focus
- Personal bias or prejudice
- Lack of trust between sender and receiver
- Poor listening skills
Technical Barriers
- System failures (email down, software crashes)
- Information overload from too many communications
- Use of wrong technology for the message
- Data security issues preventing information sharing
| Barrier | Solution |
|---|---|
| Language differences | Hire translators, use simple clear language, provide translation software |
| Long chain of command | Flatten hierarchy, use direct communication channels |
| Information overload | Summarise key points, prioritise important messages |
| Cultural differences | Cross-cultural training, cultural awareness programs |
| Technical failures | Backup systems, regular maintenance, multiple channels |
| Emotional barriers | Create open culture, encourage feedback, build trust |
Exam Tips for Topic 7
- Name the barrier AND explain it — e.g. "language barrier" alone is not enough; say "a language barrier arises when workers speak different native languages, meaning messages may be misunderstood."
- Suggest a realistic solution for each barrier — examiners expect you to evaluate, not just identify.
- Link barriers to the case study context — if the business is a multinational, language and cultural barriers are most relevant.
- Two-way communication is almost always better than one-way — always recommend feedback mechanisms.
🧠 Topic 7 Quiz
Departmental Functions
Most medium-to-large businesses are divided into departments, each with specific responsibilities. Understanding what each department does and how they work together is core IGCSE content.
👥 Human Resources (HR)
- Recruitment and selection of new staff
- Training and staff development
- Employee relations and disputes
- Dismissal, redundancy, and retirement
- Ensuring compliance with employment law
- Payroll management
💰 Finance
- Managing accounts (income, expenditure, profit)
- Producing financial statements
- Managing cash flow and budgets
- Securing funding for expansion
- Financial planning and forecasting
- Paying suppliers and collecting revenue
📣 Marketing
- Market research (finding out customer needs)
- Developing the marketing mix (4Ps)
- Advertising and promotions
- Pricing decisions
- Product development (new products/services)
- Managing brand and reputation
⚙️ Operations / Production
- Manufacturing or producing goods/services
- Managing production processes and efficiency
- Quality control and assurance
- Stock management and inventory
- Procurement (buying raw materials)
- Health and safety in production
🔬 Research & Development (R&D)
- Developing new products and technologies
- Improving existing products
- Innovation to keep ahead of competitors
- Testing product ideas and prototypes
- Long-term investment for future growth
🛒 Sales / Customer Service
- Selling products to customers
- After-sales support and complaints handling
- Building customer relationships (CRM)
- Processing orders and managing accounts
- Achieving sales targets
Exam Tips for Topic 8
- Know ALL functions of each department — don't just say "HR hires people"; list training, dismissal, legal compliance too.
- Interdepartmental links are common in longer questions — show how departments depend on each other.
- Small businesses may combine functions — in a sole trader, the owner performs all departmental functions.
- If asked which department handles X, read carefully — e.g. "pricing" = Marketing, "cash flow" = Finance, "recruitment" = HR.
🧠 Topic 8 Quiz
Sources of Finance
All businesses need money. Understanding where that money comes from — internal vs external, short-term vs long-term — and which source is appropriate for a given situation is essential.
Retained Profit (Internal)
Profit kept in the business after paying owners/dividends.
- No interest / repayment needed
- No loss of control
- Limited by how profitable the business is
Sale of Assets (Internal)
Selling surplus equipment, property, or inventory.
- One-off source, not recurring
- Only possible if business has assets to sell
- May disrupt operations if essential assets sold
Bank Loan (External)
Fixed amount borrowed from a bank, repaid with interest over time.
- Suitable for medium-to-long-term needs
- Interest increases total cost
- May require security (collateral)
Overdraft (External)
Bank allows business to spend more than its balance, up to an agreed limit.
- Flexible — only used when needed
- High interest rate
- Short-term solution only
Share Issue (External)
Selling new shares to investors (only Ltd/PLC can do this).
- No repayment needed
- Dilutes ownership and control
- Dividends must be paid to shareholders
Venture Capital (External)
Investment from venture capital firms in exchange for a share of the business.
- Suitable for high-growth startups
- Investor takes an ownership stake
- Investor may bring business expertise
Trade Credit (External)
Suppliers allow business to buy now, pay later (e.g. 30/60/90 days).
- No interest if paid on time
- Short-term only
- Helps manage cash flow
Leasing (External)
Renting equipment/vehicles rather than buying outright.
- Avoids large upfront cost
- Asset never fully owned
- Regular lease payments required
Crowdfunding (External)
Raising small amounts from many individuals (often via online platforms).
- Good for creative/startup projects
- May give rewards/equity in return
- No guaranteed success
Government Grants (External)
Non-repayable funds from government for specific purposes (innovation, green energy).
- Free money — no repayment
- Very competitive to obtain
- May have conditions attached
| Factor | Consideration |
|---|---|
| Amount needed | Large amounts → share issue or loan; small amounts → overdraft or trade credit |
| Time period | Long-term investment → loan/shares; Short-term gap → overdraft/trade credit |
| Cost | Loans and overdrafts charge interest; shares dilute ownership |
| Risk | Sole traders may avoid loans to limit personal liability risk |
| Business type | Only Ltd/PLC can issue shares; sole traders use personal savings or loans |
| Control | If owner wants to keep full control, avoid share issue |
Exam Tips for Topic 9
- Justify your recommendation — don't just name a source. Say WHY it suits that business (size, type, purpose).
- Short-term vs long-term is always relevant — a new machine (long-term asset) should be financed long-term, not by overdraft.
- Know the drawbacks too — share issue dilutes control, loans require interest, overdrafts are expensive.
- Internal first — businesses should generally use internal sources first before seeking expensive external finance.
- Sole traders CANNOT issue shares — this is a very common mistake. Only Ltd and PLC can.
🧠 Topic 9 Quiz
Cash Flow Forecasting
Cash is the lifeblood of a business. A business can be profitable but still fail if it runs out of cash. Cash flow forecasting allows businesses to predict and manage their cash position.
| January ($) | February ($) | March ($) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| INFLOWS | |||
| Sales Revenue | 8,000 | 10,000 | 12,000 |
| Loan received | 5,000 | 0 | 0 |
| Total Inflows | 13,000 | 10,000 | 12,000 |
| OUTFLOWS | |||
| Rent | 2,000 | 2,000 | 2,000 |
| Wages | 4,000 | 4,500 | 5,000 |
| Raw Materials | 3,500 | 4,000 | 4,000 |
| Total Outflows | 9,500 | 10,500 | 11,000 |
| Net Cash Flow | +3,500 | −500 | +1,000 |
| Opening Balance | 1,000 | 4,500 | 4,000 |
| Closing Balance | 4,500 | 4,000 | 5,000 |
Closing Balance = Opening Balance + Net Cash Flow
Overtrading
Expanding too quickly without enough cash to support the growth (buying stock, hiring staff before revenue arrives).
Poor Credit Control
Customers taking too long to pay (trade debtors), leaving the business short of cash even with good sales.
Seasonal Demand
Cash rich in peak seasons, cash poor in off-peak seasons (e.g. Christmas toy shop).
Unexpected Costs
Emergency repairs, sudden rise in material costs, or economic downturn reducing revenue.
| Solution | How it Helps |
|---|---|
| Bank overdraft | Provides short-term cash buffer — expensive but flexible |
| Reduce credit terms | Require customers to pay faster (30 days → 14 days) |
| Delay payments | Negotiate extended credit with suppliers |
| Cut costs | Reduce unnecessary expenses to lower outflows |
| Sell surplus assets | Convert unused equipment into cash quickly |
| Factoring | Sell trade debts to a factoring company for immediate cash (at a discount) |
Exam Tips for Topic 10
- Always complete any missing figures in the cash flow forecast if asked — use the formulas every time.
- Profit ≠ Cash — this is a crucial distinction. A business can have high profit but poor cash flow (e.g. if customers haven't paid yet).
- Negative closing balance = problem — always flag this and suggest a solution when you spot it.
- Know the purpose of forecasting — it allows management to plan ahead and avoid insolvency.
- If asked to "improve cash flow," suggest specific actions with justification (e.g. "offer 2% early payment discount to reduce debtors").
🧠 Topic 10 Quiz
Break-Even Analysis
Break-even analysis shows how many units a business must sell to cover all its costs. It's a vital tool for pricing, production, and investment decisions.
Example Calculation
A business sells a product for $20. Variable cost per unit = $8. Fixed costs = $6,000 per month.
- Contribution = $20 − $8 = $12 per unit
- Break-Even Point = $6,000 ÷ $12 = 500 units
- If the business produces 700 units: Margin of Safety = 700 − 500 = 200 units
- Profit at 700 units = (700 × $20) − (700 × $8) − $6,000 = $14,000 − $5,600 − $6,000 = $2,400 profit
2. Draw Fixed Cost line — horizontal at the FC value
3. Draw Total Cost line — starts at FC on Y-axis, slopes upward
4. Draw Total Revenue line — starts at origin (0,0), slopes upward
5. Break-even point = where TR line crosses TC line
6. Mark the Margin of Safety between actual output and BEP
| Benefits | Limitations |
|---|---|
| Shows minimum sales target to avoid loss | Assumes all output is sold (unrealistic) |
| Useful for pricing decisions | Assumes costs are constant (fixed/variable split) |
| Helps secure bank loans (demonstrates viability) | Doesn't account for changing market conditions |
| Simple and easy to understand | Assumes selling price remains constant (no discounts) |
| Allows "what-if" scenario analysis | Based on estimates which may be inaccurate |
Exam Tips for Topic 11
- Always show your working — state the formula, then substitute values. Partial marks are awarded for method.
- Contribution is NOT the same as profit — contribution pays for fixed costs first; only what remains after fixed costs is profit.
- Margin of Safety questions — if margin of safety is small, the business is very close to making a loss and is at high risk.
- Chart questions — practice drawing the three lines (FC, TC, TR). Label everything: axes, lines, BEP.
- Effect of changes — know what happens to BEP if price rises (BEP falls), if variable cost rises (BEP rises), if fixed cost rises (BEP rises).
🧠 Topic 11 Quiz
Statement of Comprehensive Income
Also called the Income Statement or Profit and Loss Account. It shows a business's revenues, costs, and profit (or loss) over a specific time period (usually one year).
| Line Item | Amount ($) | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Revenue (Turnover) | 500,000 | Price × Quantity Sold |
| Less: Cost of Sales | (280,000) | Direct production costs |
| GROSS PROFIT | 220,000 | Revenue − Cost of Sales |
| Less: Expenses | ||
| — Rent | (30,000) | Overhead |
| — Admin salaries | (50,000) | Overhead |
| — Marketing | (20,000) | Overhead |
| — Depreciation | (15,000) | Overhead |
| OPERATING PROFIT | 105,000 | Gross Profit − Expenses |
| Less: Interest | (10,000) | Loan interest payments |
| PROFIT BEFORE TAX | 95,000 | |
| Less: Corporation Tax | (19,000) | 20% example rate |
| NET PROFIT (for the year) | 76,000 | Bottom line |
| Less: Dividends | (30,000) | Paid to shareholders |
| RETAINED PROFIT | 46,000 | Reinvested in business |
Exam Tips for Topic 12
- Know the order: Revenue → Gross Profit → Operating Profit → Net Profit → Retained Profit. Each step deducts different costs.
- Gross profit ≠ Net profit — a common error. Gross profit doesn't deduct overheads or interest.
- Cost of Sales = direct/variable costs only. Rent and admin are expenses (overheads), not cost of sales.
- Retained profit is a source of internal finance — it appears in the statement of financial position too.
- Practice completing part-finished income statements — fill in each missing line step by step.
🧠 Topic 12 Quiz
Statement of Financial Position
Also known as the Balance Sheet. It shows a business's assets, liabilities, and equity at a specific point in time. It is a "financial snapshot" of the business on one particular date.
| Section | Item | Amount ($) |
|---|---|---|
| NON-CURRENT ASSETS | Property | 200,000 |
| Machinery | 80,000 | |
| Total NCA | 280,000 | |
| CURRENT ASSETS | Inventory (Stock) | 40,000 |
| Trade Receivables (Debtors) | 25,000 | |
| Cash & Bank | 15,000 | |
| Total CA | 80,000 | |
| CURRENT LIABILITIES | Trade Payables (Creditors) | 20,000 |
| Bank Overdraft | 5,000 | |
| Total CL | 25,000 | |
| WORKING CAPITAL | CA − CL | 55,000 |
| NON-CURRENT LIABILITIES | Long-term Loan | 100,000 |
| NET ASSETS | 280,000 + 55,000 − 100,000 | 235,000 |
| EQUITY | Share Capital | 150,000 |
| Retained Profit | 85,000 | |
| Total Equity | 235,000 |
The balance sheet must always balance. If it doesn't, there's an error.
Exam Tips for Topic 13
- Know what goes where — inventory, debtors, and cash are Current Assets; property and machinery are Non-Current Assets.
- Working capital is critical — if Current Liabilities > Current Assets, the business may struggle to pay short-term debts → liquidity crisis.
- The balance sheet balances — Net Assets always equals Equity. Use this to find missing figures.
- Retained profit links to the income statement — it's the cumulative profit kept in the business.
- Depreciation reduces asset value — machinery listed at cost, then subtract accumulated depreciation to get "net book value."
🧠 Topic 13 Quiz
Ratio Analysis
Ratios are calculated from financial statements to evaluate a business's performance, profitability, and financial health. They allow comparison over time and against competitors.
Capital Employed = Non-Current Assets + Working Capital (or Total Equity + Non-Current Liabilities)
Interpreting Profitability Ratios
- GPM 40% means for every $100 of revenue, $40 is gross profit after direct costs
- Higher margin = more efficient production or better pricing
- Falling GPM may mean rising raw material costs or price cutting
- ROCE > bank interest rate = worthwhile investment for shareholders
Ideal range: 1.5 : 1 to 2 : 1
Ideal range: 1 : 1 or above
Interpreting Liquidity
- Current Ratio below 1 = Current Liabilities > Current Assets → danger of not paying short-term debts
- Current Ratio above 2 = too much cash tied up in assets, not being used efficiently
- Acid Test below 1 = possible liquidity crisis even before inventory issues
| Ratio | Formula | Ideal Value | Measures |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gross Profit Margin | (GP ÷ Revenue) × 100 | Higher is better | Trading efficiency |
| Net Profit Margin | (NP ÷ Revenue) × 100 | Higher is better | Overall profitability |
| ROCE | (Op. Profit ÷ Capital Employed) × 100 | Higher is better | Return on investment |
| Current Ratio | CA ÷ CL | 1.5 – 2 : 1 | Short-term liquidity |
| Acid Test | (CA − Inventory) ÷ CL | ≥ 1 : 1 | Immediate liquidity |
• Different accounting methods make comparisons unreliable
• Ratios don't reflect non-financial factors (staff morale, reputation)
• Inflation distorts comparisons over time
• A single ratio gives limited information — must use multiple ratios together
Exam Tips for Topic 14
- Always state the formula, show calculation, then interpret — three steps for full marks.
- Compare ratios — with previous year, or competitor. A ratio on its own means little.
- Current ratio vs acid test — both measure liquidity but acid test excludes inventory. Know WHY.
- ROCE vs profit margin — margin shows efficiency; ROCE shows return on investment compared to money put in.
- If a ratio worsens, suggest specific, realistic actions to improve it (e.g. to improve NPM: cut overheads, raise price, or increase volume).
🧠 Topic 14 Quiz
The Use of Financial Documents
Financial documents are records of business transactions. They ensure accuracy, legality, and accountability in financial dealings between businesses and with customers.
2. Supplier delivers goods with DELIVERY NOTE
3. Supplier sends INVOICE requesting payment
4. If goods returned → supplier issues CREDIT NOTE
5. Buyer sends REMITTANCE ADVICE with payment
6. Supplier issues RECEIPT confirming payment
7. At end of period: STATEMENT OF ACCOUNT sent showing balance
| Document | Sent By | Sent To | Purpose |
|---|---|---|---|
| Purchase Order | Buyer | Supplier | Request goods/services |
| Delivery Note | Supplier | Buyer | Confirm goods delivered |
| Invoice | Supplier | Buyer | Request payment |
| Credit Note | Supplier | Buyer | Reduce amount owed |
| Debit Note | Buyer | Supplier | Notify error, request credit |
| Statement of Account | Supplier | Buyer | Summary of outstanding balance |
| Remittance Advice | Buyer | Supplier | Inform which invoices being paid |
| Receipt | Supplier | Buyer | Confirm payment received |
Exam Tips for Topic 15
- Know who sends each document and why — this is the most tested aspect. Direction of each document matters.
- Invoice vs Receipt — invoice requests payment (before paying); receipt confirms payment (after paying).
- Credit note is commonly tested — it reduces the buyer's debt (e.g. if goods returned or overcharged).
- Statement of Account is not a request for immediate payment — it's a summary/reconciliation document.
- Questions often describe a scenario and ask which document should be used — focus on the PURPOSE of each document.
🧠 Topic 15 Quiz
Market Research
Market research involves collecting and analysing information about customers, competitors, and markets. It helps businesses make informed decisions and reduces the risk of failure.
| Feature | Primary Research | Secondary Research |
|---|---|---|
| Data collected | First-hand, original | Already exists |
| Cost | Expensive | Cheap or free |
| Time | Time-consuming | Quick to access |
| Relevance | Specific to your needs | May not exactly match needs |
| Up-to-date | Current | May be outdated |
| Examples | Surveys, focus groups, observation | Census data, trade reports, internet |
Survey / Questionnaire
Set of questions sent to or completed by respondents.
- Large sample, quantitative and qualitative
- Online surveys are cheap and fast
- Response bias — people may not answer honestly
Interview
One-to-one questioning, in depth.
- Rich qualitative data
- Time-consuming and expensive
- Interviewer may influence responses
Focus Group
Small group discussion on a product/service.
- Detailed opinions and reactions
- Good for testing new ideas
- One dominant person can influence group
Observation
Watching and recording consumer behaviour.
- No bias — people act naturally
- CCTV, store traffic analysis
- Can't reveal motivations/opinions
Test Marketing
Launching product in a small area first.
- Real market feedback before full launch
- Reduces risk of full-scale failure
- Expensive and competitors may copy
• Reduces risk of launching unsuccessful products
• Helps businesses identify gaps in the market
• Informs pricing, promotion, and distribution decisions
• Monitors competitor activity and market trends
Exam Tips for Topic 16
- Primary vs Secondary is always tested — know benefits and drawbacks of each and when to use them.
- Qualitative vs Quantitative — qualitative = opinions; quantitative = numbers. Both are valuable for different decisions.
- Sampling bias — if the sample isn't representative, results are unreliable. Always comment on sample size and selection method.
- Link to decision making — always say HOW the research helps the business make better decisions.
- For "recommend a method" questions, give a method + explain it + say why it suits THIS specific business context.
🧠 Topic 16 Quiz
The Importance of Marketing
Marketing is the process of identifying, anticipating, and satisfying customer needs profitably. It's much more than advertising — it encompasses the entire marketing mix (4Ps / 7Ps).
📦 Product
- The good or service being sold
- Features, quality, design, branding, packaging
- Product life cycle (Introduction → Growth → Maturity → Decline)
- USP — what makes it stand out?
- Product range and extensions (line extensions)
💵 Price
- Penetration pricing — low price to enter market quickly
- Skimming — high price for new/innovative product
- Competitive pricing — match/beat competitor prices
- Cost-plus pricing — add % markup to cost
- Psychological pricing — $9.99 instead of $10
🏪 Place
- Where and how the product is made available to customers
- Distribution channels (manufacturer → wholesaler → retailer → consumer)
- Online vs physical stores
- Direct vs indirect distribution
- Location of outlets — convenience for target market
📣 Promotion
- Advertising (TV, radio, social media, posters)
- Sales promotion (buy-one-get-one, coupons, discounts)
- Public Relations (PR) — free positive media coverage
- Personal Selling — direct salesperson interaction
- Sponsorship and influencer marketing
| Stage | Sales | Profit | Marketing Strategy |
|---|---|---|---|
| Introduction | Low/growing | Negative (heavy investment) | Awareness advertising, skimming or penetration price |
| Growth | Rising fast | Rising | Brand building, expand distribution |
| Maturity | Peak, then stable | Highest | Competitive pricing, promotions, product extensions |
| Decline | Falling | Falling | Reduce costs, extension strategy or withdraw product |
Exam Tips for Topic 17
- The 4Ps must work together — a premium product needs premium pricing, high-end place, and selective promotion. Inconsistency = poor marketing.
- Product life cycle questions — identify the stage from data (sales trend) and suggest an appropriate strategy for that stage.
- Pricing strategy questions — always justify WHY a strategy suits a particular product/market/business stage.
- Promotion ≠ advertising — promotion is one of the 4Ps; advertising is one element of promotion. Show you know the difference.
- E-commerce changes "Place" — online sales eliminate some distribution levels; worth mentioning in modern business contexts.
🧠 Topic 17 Quiz
Market Segmentation
Market segmentation involves dividing a large market into smaller, more homogeneous groups of consumers who share similar characteristics, so businesses can target them more effectively.
👤 Demographic
Based on measurable population characteristics:
- Age (children, teens, adults, elderly)
- Gender (male, female, non-binary)
- Income (high, middle, low earners)
- Occupation / education level
- Family size / life stage
🌍 Geographic
Based on location of consumers:
- Country / region / city
- Urban vs rural
- Climate (cold/warm countries)
- Local culture and language
- Population density
🧠 Psychographic
Based on personality and lifestyle:
- Lifestyle choices (health-conscious, adventurous)
- Values and beliefs (eco-friendly, religious)
- Personality traits (introvert/extrovert)
- Social class and aspirations
- Interests and hobbies
🛒 Behavioural
Based on consumer purchasing behaviour:
- Purchase frequency (occasional vs regular buyers)
- Brand loyalty
- Benefits sought (price vs quality vs convenience)
- Usage rate (light, medium, heavy users)
- Occasion (gifts, seasonal, impulse)
| Benefits | Drawbacks |
|---|---|
| More targeted marketing — less wasted spend | Higher cost of producing different products for each segment |
| Products better matched to customer needs | Smaller segments = smaller potential market |
| Higher customer satisfaction and loyalty | Difficult to identify and reach segments accurately |
| Competitive advantage through specialisation | Segments may change over time |
| Allows premium pricing for specialist products | Over-segmentation can confuse the brand |
Exam Tips for Topic 18
- Know all four bases — demographic, geographic, psychographic, behavioural — with examples for each.
- Explain why a segment is appropriate — don't just name it. Say "This business should target the 18–25 demographic because..."
- Niche vs Mass is commonly contrasted — know when each strategy is suitable and the trade-offs involved.
- Segmentation + Marketing Mix — after identifying a segment, explain how the 4Ps should be adjusted to suit that segment.
- Limitations matter — segmentation can be expensive and if the segment is too small, there may not be enough customers to be profitable.