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Published byElwin O’Neal’ Modified over 9 years ago
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Types of Businesses Organizations Unit 7 Decision, Decisions
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A business organization is an establishment formed to carry on a commercial enterprise Also called a company or a firm
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Single or Sole Proprietorship Business owned and managed by one person Over 11 million in the U.S. Most common type of organization Examples: Restaurants, gas stations, lawn care
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Sole Proprietorship Advantages - Easy start-up (business licenses, site permit, name of business) - Sole receiver of profit - Full control of business - Easy to discontinue - Not subject to special business taxes Disadvantages - Unlimited personal liability o Liability is a legally bound obligation to pay debts. Sole proprietors are bound to all of their business debts - Limited access to resources - Limited life – business lack permanence beyond the life of the sole proprietor
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Partnership Business owned by 2 or more people Examples: Doctors, dentists, lawyers
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Partnership Advantages - Easy start-up - Shared decision making - Specialization – each partner can bring his or her talents - Larger pool of assets – helpful when the business needs to borrow money - Not subject to special business taxes Disadvantages - Unlimited liability - Each general partner is bound to debt incurred and responsible for paying this debt - General partners do not have absolute control over their business - Potential for conflict
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Corporations Business that has a legal identity separate from the owners Large business owned by stockholders Stocks: shares of ownership in company Stockholders: people who invest money in company in hopes of making a profit
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Structure of a Corporation Board of Directors Officers Stockholders
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Corporations Advantages - Limited liability for owners - Transferable ownership – owners can sell stock and get money in return - Long Life – business does not end with the death of the owners. - More potential for growth Disadvantages - Expensive and difficult to start up - Double taxes o Corporations pay taxes on income. o Stockholders receive dividends (profits paid out to stockholders) o Dividends are also taxed - Potential loss of control by the founders – Board of Directors usually run corporations. - More legal requirements and regulations
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Mergers: when companies combine Horizontal Merger – joining of two or more firms competing in the same market with the same good or service Vertical Merger – joining of two or more firms involved in different stages of producing the same good or service. Conglomerate – merging of more than three businesses that make unrelated products
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– a large corporation that produces and sells its goods & services throughout the world. Multinational Corporation
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Multinational Corporations Advantages - Provides jobs and products around the world - Efforts to spread new technology around the world - Increase standard of living in many poor countries Disadvantages - Low wages - Poor working conditions
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Franchise Semi-independent business that pays fees to a parent company in return for the exclusive right to sell a certain product or service
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Nonprofit organization Functions like a business, but does not operate for the purpose of earning a profit
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Cooperative Owned & operated by a group of individuals for their shared benefit Types: consumer, service, & producer Sam’s & Costco, closest thing we have to a “ co-op”
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