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Chapter 2 – Forms of Business Ownership
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FORMS OF BUSINESS OWNERSHIP SOLE PROPRIETORSHIP - Owned by one person FRANCHISE - One business licenses another to use its name, operating procedures and so on - As a hybrid, can have any form of ownership CO-OPERATIVE - owned by its workers or by members who buy from the business CORPORATION - Business is an artificial “person” created by law and is owned by shareholders PARTNERSHIP - Usually owned by two or more partners
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With a partner speculate about the advantages, disadvantages of each form of business ownership What types of decisions must business people make before opening a business?
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ADVANTAGESDISADVANTAGES be your own boss easy to start and end profits go to the owner unlimited liability financing may be difficult owner may not be familiar with all aspects of business DEFINITION A sole proprietorship is a business owned by one person. The owner has unlimited liability – if the business does poorly the owner is responsible for all the losses. Example: bicycle store owner, hot dog stand owner
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ADVANTAGESDISADVANTAGES More capital and financing Shared responsibilities Unlimited liability in general partnerships Partner disagreements DEFINITION A business with two or more partners who share the responsibilities and profits/losses. Types of Partnerships: 1.General – most common – partners have unlimited liability 2.Limited – partners have limited liability Examples: Some lawyers (e.g. divorce, civil, real estate) will form partnerships to serve a wider client base
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John D. Rockefeller once said. It Is Better To Have A Friendship Based On A Business Partnership Than A Partnership Based On A Friendship What do you think? Explain the position you take.
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ADVANTAGESDISADVANTAGES Limited liability Transfer of ownership is simple Timely and costly start-up People who own only a few shares do not have much influence on how the company is run DEFINITION A type of business owned by, but existing separately from, its shareholders. 4 Types of Corporations: 1) Private 3) Public 2) Crown4) Municipal Examples: IBM, DELL, HP, APPLE, Microsoft
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Can be as small as one person or as large as a multinational The ownership of large corporations is divided into many small parts, called shares or stock ◦ An individual who owns shares is called a shareholder Some corporations sell (trade) their stock on public exchanges such as TSX, Nasdaq.
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Stock Market Rap Stock Market Rap
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ADVANTAGESDISADVANTAGES Less expensive goods/services Easily set up Decision-making process could be difficult DEFINITION A business owned by the people, or members, who buy the products or use the services that the business offers. In Canada many co-operatives in the health care and child care sectors are not-for-profit Examples: IGA (Independent Grocers Alliance), bank unions, The Co-operative Housing Federation of Canada
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ADVANTAGESDISADVANTAGES Brand recognition Less expensive cost of products Uniform quality of products Support from franchisor (ready made business) Expensive to purchase Monthly & advertising fees Little/no control over menu and prices DEFINITION FRANCHISER FRANCHISEE. In a franchise operation, one business, the FRANCHISER, licenses the rights to its business to another, the FRANCHISEE.
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Service Retail Manufacturing Non Profit
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What is E-Commerce? What is a Joint Venture? What is an International Franchise? What is a Strategic Alliance? What is a Merger? What is Offshoring? What is a Multinational Corporation?
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