Chapter 3
Chapter 3
Chapter 3
Small-Business Ownership
Chapter 3
Learning Objectives
1. Highlight the contributions small businesses make to the
economy.
2. List the most common reasons people start their own
companies and identify the common traits of successful
entrepreneurs.
3. Explain the importance of planning a new business and
outline the key elements in a business plan.
4. Identify the major causes of business failures and identify
sources of advice and support for struggling business owners.
5. Discuss the principal sources of small-business private
financing.
6. Explain the advantages and disadvantages of franchising.
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The Big World of Small Business
Many businesses start out with an entrepreneur, a compelling idea, and the drive to succeed.
Defining just what constitutes a small business is surprisingly tricky, but it is vitally important
because billions of dollars are at stake when it comes to such things as employment regulations—
from which the smallest companies are often exempt—and government contracts reserved for
small businesses.
97 per cent of Australian businesses in June 2014 were small businesses (The Australian Bureau
of Statistics, 2015).
Small Business:
In the states, a small business is defined as a company that is independently owned and
operated, is not dominant in its field, and employs fewer than 500 people (although this
number varies by industry).
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Characteristics of Small Businesses
Regardless of their primary objectives, small
companies tend to differ from large ones in a variety of
important ways:
Most small firms have a narrow focus, offering fewer
goods and services to fewer market segments.
Small businesses have to get by with limited resources.
Small businesses often have more freedom to innovate.
Entrepreneurial firms find it easier to make decisions
quickly and react to changes in the marketplace.
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THREE Factors Contributing to the Increase
in the Number of Small Businesses Today
E-Commerce, Social Media, and Other Technologies:
The rapid growth of e-commerce and social media in recent years has revolutionized the way many
businesses operate. Companies such as Pandora and Facebook couldn’t exist without web
technologies, of course, because their connection to customers happens entirely online.
Facebook, Google, and Dell are just a few of the significant companies started by college students.
Outsourcing, the practice of engaging outside firms to handle either individual projects or entire
business functions, also creates numerous opportunities for small businesses and entrepreneurs.
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The Entrepreneurial Spirit
Every professional should understand the entrepreneurial
spirit:
the positive, forward-thinking desire to create profitable,
sustainable business enterprises—and the role it can play in
every company, not just small or new firms.
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Why People Start their Own Companies
Starting a company is nearly always a difficult, risky,
exhausting endeavor that requires
significant sacrifice. Why do people do it?
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Exhibit 3.2 Qualities Shared by Successful
Entrepreneurs
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Exhibit 3.3 Business Start-Up Options
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Blueprint for an Effective
Business Plan
Business plan:
A document that summarizes a proposed business venture, goals,
and plans for achieving those goals.
Business plans can be written before the company is launched, when the
company is seeking funding, and after the company is up and running.
First, it guides the company operations and outlines a strategy for turning an
idea into reality.
Second, it helps persuade lenders and investors to finance your business if
outside money is required.
Third, it can provide a reality check in case an idea just isn’t feasible.
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Blueprint for an Effective
Business Plan (cont.)
Mission and Company
Summary
objectives overview
Management
Products and Target
and key
services market
personnel
Marketing
strategy
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Blueprint for an Effective
Business Plan (cont.)
Design and
Operations Start-up
development
plan schedule
plans
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Exhibit 3.4 Why New Businesses Fail
ADVICE AND SUPPORT FOR BUSINESS OWNERS
Keeping a business going is no simple task. Fortunately, entrepreneurs can
get advice and support from a wide variety of sources:
For example: the Australia and New Zealand Bank (ANZ) provides a small
business advice service (www.businessadvice.anz.com) and (
https://thesbhub.com.au). The service helps entrepreneurs starting a
business with finding finance, seeking legal advice and managing cash
flows.
ADVICE AND SUPPORT FOR BUSINESS OWNERS
Mentors and Advisory Boards: Many entrepreneurs and
business owners take advantage of individual mentors and
advisory boards.
Advisory Board
A team of people with subject-area expertise or vital
contacts who help a business owner review plans and
decisions
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ADVICE AND SUPPORT FOR BUSINESS OWNERS
Print and Online Media: Your local library and the Internet
offer information to help any small-business owner
face just about every challenge imaginable.
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Financing Possibilities over
Exhibit 3.6
the Life of a Small Business
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Financing Options for Small Businesses:
Private Financing
• Seed Money:
Many firms get seed money, their very first infusion of capital used to get a
business started , through family loans. If you go this route, be sure to make the
process as formal as a bank loan would be, complete with a specified repayment
plan. Otherwise, problems with the loan can cause problems in the family.
They will often invest for a period of between three and five years, and
sometimes longer.
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Financing Options for Small Businesses:
Private Financing
• Credit Cards and Personal Lines of Credit:
Although they tend to be extremely risky and one of the most expensive forms of
financing, credit cards are also widely available and sometimes the only source of
funding an entrepreneur has. Consequently, roughly half of all entrepreneurs and
small-business owners use their cards to get cash for start-up or ongoing expenses.
http://www.brw.com.au/p/business/why_we_should_clone_america_small_Y2ehdTvAi
81O87SOECPr9H
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Financing Options for Small Businesses:
Public Financing
Companies with solid growth potential may also seek funding
from the public at large, although only a small fraction of the
companies in Australia are publicly traded. Whenever a
corporation offers its shares of ownership to the public for the
first time, the company is said to be going public. The shares
offered for sale at this point are the company’s initial public
offering (IPO).
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The Franchise Alternative
An alternative to creating or buying an independent company
is to buy a franchise.
Franchise:
A business arrangement in which one company (the franchisee)
obtains the rights to sell the products and use various elements
of a business system of another company (the franchisor)
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TYPES OF FRANCHISES
Franchises are of three basic types:
• Second, as a franchisee, you usually have little control over decisions the franchisor makes
that affect the entire system. Disagreements and even lawsuits have erupted in recent
years over actions taken by franchisors regarding product supplies, advertising, and
pricing.
• Third, if the fundamental business model of the franchise system no longer works—or
never worked in the first place—or if customer demand for the goods and services you sell
declines, you don’t have the option of independently changing your business in response.
• Finally, Cost of buying a franchise can vary widely, based on the complexity and popularity
of the franchise.
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