This document discusses factors to consider when evaluating a potential business opportunity. It identifies sources of business inspiration including innovation, recognizing market opportunities, changing customer needs, and new technologies. Personal motivation for starting a business and skills/qualities of successful entrepreneurs are also examined. Students will learn to identify business opportunities, apply management concepts, and research case studies. Key decisions that must be made prior to starting a business include evaluating personal suitability and identifying the business concept.
ICT Role in 21st Century Education & its Challenges.pptx
BUSINESS MANAGEMENT STEPUP 2017
1.
2. Area of Study 1: The Business Idea
Area of Study 2: External Environment
Area of Study 3: Internal Environment
Area of Study 1: Legal requirements & financial considerations
Area of Study 2: Marketing A Business
Area of Study 3: Staffing A Business
3.
4. • Identify the range of personal motivations behind
a business start-up.
• Recognise the personal characteristics and
qualities possessed by successful entrepreneurs.
• Categorise different sources of business
inspiration for innovative business ideas and
opportunities in the market.
5. Students will learn the following:
• The personal motivation behind starting a business such as
the desire for independence both financially and personally, to
make a profit and to fulfil a market and/or social need.
• The characteristics of successful business managers and
business entrepreneurs and how these characteristics
contribute to business success.
• Sources of business opportunity including innovation and
entrepreneurship, recognising and taking advantage of market
opportunities, changing customer needs, research and
development, technological development and global markets.
6. Students should be able to:
• Identify business opportunities.
• Define, describe and apply relevant business
management concepts and terms.
• Acquire, record, interpret and share business information
and ideas.
• Research and analyse case studies and contemporary
examples of business management applicable to planning
a business.
• Apply business management knowledge to practical
and/or simulated business situations.
9. Effective decision making is an
integral component of a successful
business operation.
Managing a
business
involves making
decisions about
all aspects of
the business.
10. Many key decisions are made prior to
business commencement. These include:
• personal suitability to start and
operate a business. This involves
asking: Is this business right for me?
• where to look for inspiration for
business ideas
• the business concept (type of
business).
11. The first step for a person starting a business is to
conduct a self-evaluation focusing on the following:
• Personal motivation, or reasons, for
going into business must be examined.
• A self-appraisal of personal skills, abilities
and personality type should be completed.
• Personal and business objectives
must be established and clarified.
12. People decide to start a business
for a variety of reasons, including:
• a desire for independence and to be their own boss
• potential wealth and financial independence
• self-worth: many see business ownership as a
means of recognition as a successful person potential
for flexible working hours and conditions
13. All of the above
reasons are valid…
• potential their personal
objectives in starting a business
…however, a person
starting a business must
assess whether or not
they are doing so for the
right reasons.
They must clearly
identify and evaluate:
• the things that are
important to them
• whether the business
idea can realistically satisfy
their personal objectives
14. To be successful in
business requires
numerous skills.
Some of these will
be specific to the
type of business;
others will be
generic. They
include: …
15. • Communication skills:
• Technical skills and appropriate qualifications
• Time management skills:
• Planning and organisational skills
• Administrative skills:
• Analytical skills:
• Computer skills:
• Negotiation skills:
• Leadership skills:
17. • Ability to think outside the square
• Preparedness to take risks
• Confidence
• Innovative thinkers
• Vision
• Flexibility and ability to change
direction when required
• Ability to work independently
without requiring guidance
• Capacity for hard work.
• Willingness to
accept responsibility.
• Ambition: needed to
achieve long-term goals.
• Ability to be practical
• Ethical
• Resilience
18. • Innovation, or new, improved
products or methods of doing
things, is often the impetus for a
new business venture.
• An innovation can be a whole new
product or a variation on an existing
product that improves it, such as
colour, design or features.
19. • An entrepreneur combines
an element of risk taking with
their own knowledge assets
and skills in order to make a
profit.
• Entrepreneurship involves
designing, launching and
running a new business.
Entrepreneurs are often
innovators.
20. • A successful business entrepreneur is able to see
opportunities others have failed to recognise.
• The source of most business
opportunities is change
• As society's needs and wants
change and evolve, so too do
the types of goods and services
people want to purchase.
21. Customer needs and wants change
and evolve. Some examples of this are:
• If the type of people (demographic)
moving into an area is changing, so too will
the products that market seeks to buy.
• If government changes a law, often
a business opportunity emerges.
• As lifestyles change so
does consumer demand.
22. • Many entrepreneurs have converted a hobby into a
money-making opportunity.
• Brainstorming and SWOT analysis are tools for creative
problem solving, identifying strengths and weaknesses,
generating ideas for new businesses or products.
23. • The media is often a source of ideas for a
business concept. Regular observation of the
media can provide inspiration and innovative ideas.
• Trade shows and exhibitions
are sources of ideas. These
provide opportunities to see new
products, obtain ideas and
maybe opportunities for the
rebranding of existing products.
24. A business may spot a change creating
a favourable condition that the business
can take advantage of.
Often such a change creates a gap
between customer demand and supply.
An entrepreneur is able to recognise
signs in customer needs and wants.
26. Looking overseas can reveal innovation and
ideas that have not yet reached Australia.
The first person to import a
new idea from overseas
can profit very handsomely.
Often franchises that have
been successful overseas
are successfully introduced
into the Australian market.
27. Research and development is often the
source of business ideas.
It is possible to identify new products
and technologies for potential
development through observation of
a particular target market.
Another option is to research and
develop ways of adding value to an
existing product for consumers.
28. The development and impending
availability of new technologies is often
a source of ideas for a new business.
For example, the growth and development of the
World Wide Web, coupled with the handheld
devices capable of mobile internet access…
…has enabled the formation
and development of many new
business ideas. Airbnb and
Uber are two examples.
29. A brilliant piece of technology or an
innovative idea is not the only criteria for
a potentially successful business idea.
There must also exist a market, or
group of consumers who are prepared
to purchase the product at a price that
will provide a profit to the business.
For a business concept to be an attractive
proposition for development, there must be a strong
possibility of a return on the investments made.
30. In order for the potential of income to be
made the following criteria must exist:
• Real demand.
• Return on investment.
• Freely available resources & skills.
• Market competitiveness.
• Objectives of risks must be feasible/achievable.
31. There are always opportunities for potential business
development. The trick is to identify and locate them.
Successful entrepreneurs are constantly
looking for innovative ideas that can be
translated into ideas for new business.
Changes in lifestyles, fashions, trends, laws, economic
situations, demographics and world events are all indicators
of potentially altered consumer demands and buying habits.
A business operator should always
keep an ear to the ground.