Unit 9

    Cards (92)

    • Organic growth

      Occurs when a business grows through expanding its operations, for example by selling more products through opening new stores
    • External growth

      When a firm grows by integrating with another firm due to a merger or takeover
    • Growth

      Relates to business expansion
    • Retrenchment

      The process whereby a business cuts back on its operations
    • Economies of scale

      Occur when the units costs fall as the scale of operation increases
    • Diseconomies of scale
      Occur when the unit costs rise as the size of the business increases
    • Economies of scale
      • Technical
      • Managerial
      • Purchasing
    • Diseconomies of scale
      • Control/co-ordination
      • Communication
      • Motivation
    • Economies of scope

      Occur where it is cheaper for a business to produce a range of products rather than specialise in just a few products
    • Experience curve

      The more experienced a firm is at producing a product, the lower its costs
    • Synergy

      Happens when the value of two businesses brought together is higher than the sum of the value of the two individual businesses i.e. when synergy happens 1 + 1 = more than 2
    • Overtrading

      Happens when a business expands too quickly without having the financial resources to support such a quick expansion
    • Greiner's model of growth
      1. Leadership crisis
      2. Autonomy crisis
      3. Control crisis
      4. Red tape crisis
      5. Growth crisis
    • Increased marketing activities

      May be required to generate higher demand
    • Sufficient resources

      Required to meet marketing objectives
    • Ensure sufficient market research

      Undertaken if entering new markets/developing new products
    • Decisions regarding the marketing mix

      To ensure growth; exact decisions taken depend on many factors, such as the nature of the market
    • Existing staff

      Have the opportunity to take on new responsibilities/promotions; this may be seen as positive and developmental by the staff; alternatively, some staff may experience motivation issues and be reluctant to take on extra work
    • Additional recruitment

      May need to be undertaken
    • Training of new/existing staff

      May be required
    • Increase in output
      Will impact on capacity utilisation; this may be viewed positively by the business, as its fixed costs will be spread across more units; alternatively, staff and resources may be stretched to satisfy any increases in demand
    • In the long term, increase in capacity

      May be required or decisions made relating to outsourcing
    • Impact on working capital

      To ensure it is sufficient as the business grows
    • Ensuring there is suitable long-term funding

      To finance the growth
    • Careful budgeting
      Is required to ensure expenditure is controlled and revenue is monitored
    • Promotional budgets

      May be reduced
    • Product ranges

      May be cut back/business may choose to exit from certain markets
    • Business

      Likely to focus on a smaller core business
    • Redundancies

      May be required
    • Businesses

      May redeploy staff to other areas
    • Motivation issues

      Leading to lower labour productivity
    • Uncertainty about job security
      May result in skilled employees leaving the firm to find more stable posts in rival businesses
    • Scale of operation
      Will be reduced
    • Investment in technology/equipment
      Will be reduced/stopped
    • May reduce unit costs

      If diseconomies of scale can be overcome
    • Increase in expenditure
      On redundancy payments
    • Smaller workforce
      Will reduce wage costs
    • Business
      May be able to raise funds through the sale of unwanted assets
    • Takeovers and mergers

      • Lower unit costs through the benefit of economies of scale
      • Creation of synergies
      • Increase in market share
    • Drawbacks of takeovers and mergers

      • Many businesses overestimate the benefits of joining with another firm
      • The two businesses often fail to take account of the different cultures between them; this is often due to too little time spent before the acquisition to determine whether the two businesses will be compatible
      • 65% of mergers/takeovers fail to benefit shareholders
    See similar decks