The Nature of Business
1.1 The Nature of Business
🧭 Overview
🧠 One-sentence thesis
Businesses and not-for-profit organizations create our standard of living by combining factors of production to provide goods and services, accepting risk in pursuit of profit or other goals.
📌 Key points (3–5)
- What businesses do: organizations that strive for profit by providing goods and services desired by customers, creating the basis of our standard of living.
- Risk and reward relationship: greater risks generally mean greater potential for profit (or loss); conservative stances can lead to losing ground to nimble competitors.
- Not-for-profits vs for-profits: not-for-profit organizations pursue goals other than profit (e.g., feeding the poor, preserving the environment) but still compete for resources, employees, and donations.
- Common confusion: standard of living vs quality of life—standard of living measures output people can buy with their money, while quality of life refers to general human happiness based on life expectancy, education, health, sanitation, and leisure time.
- Five factors of production: natural resources, labor, capital, entrepreneurship, and knowledge are the building blocks all organizations need to create goods and services.
💼 What businesses contribute to society
💼 Creating standard of living through goods and services
Business: an organization that strives for a profit by providing goods and services desired by its customers.
Goods: tangible items manufactured by businesses, such as laptops.
Services: intangible offerings of businesses that can't be held, touched, or stored (e.g., physicians, lawyers, hairstylists, car washes, airlines).
- Businesses serve both consumers (medical care, autos, countless goods and services) and other organizations (hospitals, retailers, governments) by providing machinery, goods for resale, computers, and thousands of other items.
- They create the goods and services that are the basis of our standard of living.
Standard of living: measured by the output of goods and services people can buy with the money they have.
- The United States has one of the highest standards of living in the world.
- Don't confuse: higher average wages ≠ higher standard of living. Although countries like Switzerland and Germany have higher average wages than the U.S., their standards of living aren't higher because prices are so much higher—the same amount of money buys less.
- Example: an Extra Value Meal at McDonald's costs less than $5 in the U.S., but a similar meal might cost as much as $10 in another country.
🌟 Building quality of life
Quality of life: the general level of human happiness based on such things as life expectancy, educational standards, health, sanitation, and leisure time.
- Building a high quality of life is a combined effort of businesses, government, and not-for-profit organizations.
- In 2017, Vienna, Austria, ranked highest in quality of life, followed by Zurich, Switzerland; Auckland, New Zealand; and Munich, Germany.
- Seven of the top 10 locations are in western Europe, two are in Australia/New Zealand, and one is in Canada; not one of the world's top cities is in the United States.
- At the other end of the scale, Baghdad, Iraq, scored lowest on the annual survey.
⚖️ Risk, revenue, and profit
⚖️ Understanding business risk
Risk: the potential to lose time and money or otherwise not be able to accomplish an organization's goals.
- Creating a quality of life is not without risks.
- Example: Without enough blood donors, the American Red Cross faces the risk of not meeting the demand for blood by victims of disaster.
- Example: Businesses such as Microsoft face the risk of falling short of their revenue and profit goals.
💰 Revenue, costs, and profit
Revenue: the money a company receives by providing services or selling goods to customers.
Costs: expenses for rent, salaries, supplies, transportation, and many other items that a company incurs from creating and selling goods and services.
Profit: the money left over after a company pays all costs.
- Example: Some of the costs incurred by Microsoft in developing its software include expenses for salaries, facilities, and advertising.
- A company whose costs are greater than revenues shows a loss.
- When a company such as Microsoft uses its resources intelligently, it can often increase sales, hold costs down, and earn a profit.
- Not all companies earn profits, but that is the risk of being in business.
📈 The risk-profit relationship
- In U.S. business today, there is generally a direct relationship between risks and profit: the greater the risks, the greater the potential for profit (or loss).
- Companies that take too conservative a stance may lose out to more nimble competitors who react quickly to the changing business environment.
- Example: Sony, once a leader with its Walkman music player and Trinitron televisions, steadily lost ground—and profits—over the past two decades by not embracing new technologies such as the digital music format and flat-panel TV screens. Sony misjudged what the market wanted and stayed with proprietary technologies rather than create cross-platform options for consumers. Apple, at the time an upstart in personal music devices, quickly grabbed the lion's share of the digital music market with its iPods and iTunes music streaming service.
- By 2016, Sony restructured its business portfolio and has experienced substantial success with its PlayStation 4 gaming console and original gaming content.
🤝 Not-for-profit organizations
🤝 What makes them different
Not-for-profit organization: an organization that exists to achieve some goal other than the usual business goal of profit.
- Examples: Charities such as Habitat for Humanity, the United Way, the American Cancer Society, and the World Wildlife Fund; most hospitals, zoos, arts organizations, civic groups, and religious organizations.
- Over the last 20 years, the number of nonprofit organizations—and the employees and volunteers who work for them—has increased considerably.
- Government is our largest and most pervasive not-for-profit group.
- More than 1.5 million nongovernmental not-for-profit entities operate in the United States today and contribute more than $900 billion annually to the U.S. economy.
🎯 Goals and competition
- Like their for-profit counterparts, these groups set goals and require resources to meet those goals. However, their goals are not focused on profits.
- Example goals: feeding the poor, preserving the environment, increasing attendance at the ballet, or preventing drunk driving.
- Not-for-profit organizations do not compete directly with one another in the same manner as, for example, Ford and Honda, but they do compete for talented employees, people's limited volunteer time, and donations.
🔄 Blurring boundaries
- The boundaries that formerly separated not-for-profit and for-profit organizations have blurred, leading to a greater exchange of ideas between the sectors.
- For-profit businesses are now addressing social issues.
- Successful not-for-profits apply business principles to operate more effectively.
- Not-for-profit managers are concerned with the same concepts as their colleagues in for-profit companies: developing strategy, budgeting carefully, measuring performance, encouraging innovation, improving productivity, demonstrating accountability, and fostering an ethical workplace environment.
- Example: In addition to pursuing a museum's artistic goals, top executives manage the administrative and business side of the organization: human resources, finance, and legal concerns. Ticket revenues cover a fraction of the museum's operating costs, so the director spends a great deal of time seeking major donations and memberships. Today's museum boards of directors include both art patrons and business executives who want to see sound fiscal decision-making in a not-for-profit setting. Therefore, a museum director must walk a fine line between the institution's artistic mission and financial policies.
🏗️ Factors of production
🏗️ The building blocks overview
Factors of production: inputs in the form of resources required to provide goods and services, regardless of whether organizations operate in the for-profit or not-for-profit sector.
- Four traditional factors of production are common to all productive activity: natural resources, labor (human resources), capital, and entrepreneurship.
- Many experts now include knowledge as a fifth factor, acknowledging its key role in business success.
- By using the factors of production efficiently, a company can produce more goods and services with the same resources.
🌲 Natural resources
- Commodities that are useful inputs in their natural state are known as natural resources.
- They include farmland, forests, mineral and oil deposits, and water.
- Sometimes natural resources are simply called land, although the term means more than just land.
- Example: International Paper Company uses wood pulp to make paper, and Pacific Gas & Electric Company may use water, oil, or coal to produce electricity.
- Today urban sprawl, pollution, and limited resources have raised questions about resource use. Conservationists, environmentalists, and government bodies are proposing laws to require land-use planning and resource conservation.
👷 Labor (human resources)
- Labor, or human resources, refers to the economic contributions of people working with their minds and muscles.
- This input includes the talents of everyone—from a restaurant cook to a nuclear physicist—who performs the many tasks of manufacturing and selling goods and services.
🏭 Capital
Capital: the tools, machinery, equipment, and buildings used to produce goods and services and get them to the consumer.
- Sometimes the term capital is also used to mean the money that buys machinery, factories, and other production and distribution facilities.
- However, because money itself produces nothing, it is not one of the basic inputs. Instead, it is a means of acquiring the inputs. Therefore, in this context, capital does not include money.
🚀 Entrepreneurship
Entrepreneurs: the people who combine the inputs of natural resources, labor, and capital to produce goods or services with the intention of making a profit or accomplishing a not-for-profit goal.
- These people make the decisions that set the course for their businesses; they create products and production processes or develop services.
- Because they are not guaranteed a profit in return for their time and effort, they must be risk-takers.
- Of course, if their companies succeed, the rewards may be great.
- Today, many individuals want to start their own businesses. They are attracted by the opportunity to be their own boss and reap the financial rewards of a successful firm.
- Many start their first business from their dorm rooms, such as Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook, or while living at home, so their cost is almost zero.
- Examples: Microsoft cofounder Bill Gates, who was named the richest person in the world in 2017, as well as Google founders Sergey Brin and Larry Page. Many thousands of individuals have started companies that, while remaining small, make a major contribution to the U.S. economy.
🧠 Knowledge (the fifth factor)
Knowledge: the combined talents and skills of the workforce and has become a primary driver of economic growth.
Knowledge workers: employees whose jobs require knowledge and cognitive skills.
- A number of outstanding managers and noted academics are beginning to emphasize a fifth factor of production—knowledge.
- Today's competitive environment places a premium on knowledge and learning over physical resources.
- Recent statistics suggest that the number of U.S. knowledge workers has doubled over the last 30 years, with an estimated 2 million knowledge job openings annually.
- Despite the fact that many "routine" jobs have been replaced by automation over the last decade or outsourced to other countries, technology has actually created more jobs that require knowledge and cognitive skills.
🎯 Real-world example: StickerGiant
🎯 Entrepreneurial risk-taking and adaptation
- John Fischer of Longmont, Colorado, started his business inspired by the drawn-out U.S. presidential election in 2000 between Bush and Gore, creating a bumper sticker that claimed, "He's Not My President," which became a top seller.
- As a result, Fischer started an online retail sticker store, which he viewed as possibly the "Amazon of Stickers."
- Designing and making stickers in his basement, Fischer's start-up would eventually become a multimillion-dollar company, recognized in 2017 by Forbes as one of its top 25 small businesses.
🔄 Embracing change
- By 2011, the business was going strong; however, the entrepreneur decided to do away with the retail store, instead focusing the business on custom orders, which became StickerGiant's main product.
- In 2012 he decided to introduce a concept called open-book management, in which he shares the company's financials with employees at a weekly meeting.
- Other topics discussed at the meeting include customer comments and feedback, employee concerns, and colleague appreciation for one another.
- Fischer believes sharing information about the company's performance (good or bad) not only allows employees to feel part of the operation, but also empowers them to embrace change or suggest ideas that could help the business expand and flourish.
🔧 Innovation and technology
- Innovation is also visible in the technology StickerGiant uses to create miles and miles of custom stickers (nearly 800 miles of stickers in 2016).
- The manufacturing process involves digital printing and laser-finishing equipment.
- Fischer says only five other companies worldwide have the laser-finishing equipment StickerGiant uses as part of its operations.
- Because of the investment in this high-tech equipment, the company can make custom stickers in large quantities overnight and ship them to customers the next day.
📊 Current success
- With $10 million in annual sales and nearly 40 employees, StickerGiant continues to be a successful endeavor for John Fischer and his employees almost two decades after Fischer created his first sticker.
- In 2016, StickerGiant put together Saul the Sticker Ball, a Guinness World Records winner that weighed in at a whopping 232 pounds, created from more than 170,000 stickers that had been lying around the office.