Y12 Business Studies - Unit 1 Revision Workshop
Y12 Business Studies - Unit 1 Revision Workshop
Y12 Business Studies - Unit 1 Revision Workshop
UNIT 1
REVISION
WORKSHOP
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Today
Session Topic
1 A Viable Business Idea
2 Crunching the Numbers
Break
3 Financing the Start-up
4 Understanding the Market
Lunch (back for 2.00 p.m.)
Quick quiz
5 Why Start-ups Fail
6 Evaluating the Start-up
Session 1
A Viable
Business Idea
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Some Important
Concepts
ENTERPRIS
RISK
E
OPPORTU
RETURN NITY
COST
Crunching the
Numbers
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What You Need to
Calculate
• Revenues (sales)
• Costs – fixed and variable
• Profit
• Contribution & Break-even
• Cash flow forecasts
• Market share, size & growth
(later)
Classifying Costs
• Variable costs
– Costs which change as
output varies
– Lower risk for a start-up:
no sales = no variable
costs
• Fixed costs
– Costs which do not
change when output
varies
– Fixed costs increase the
risk of a start-up
Fixed or Variable?
Fixed or Variable?
Calculating Profit
or Loss
PROFIT =
TOTAL SALES
less
TOTAL COSTS
An Example
Sales Costs Profit or Loss?
£10,000
£6,500
£3,500
Contribution
• Contribution looks at the profit made
on individual products
• It is used in calculating how many
items need to be sold to cover all the
business' total costs (variable + fixed)
• Contribution is the difference
between sales and variable costs
Contribution -
Formulas
Contribution = total sales less
total variable costs
Contribution per unit = selling
price per unit less variable costs
per unit
Total contribution can also be
calculated as:
Contribution per unit x number
of units sold
Contribution – Have
a Go!
Contribution
4
8,000
11,000
1,250
Breakeven chart
Total sales
100
90
80
Sales and costs
70 Total costs
(£’000)
60
50
Fixed costs
40
30
Variable costs
20
10
0
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10
Units of Output
(‘000)
Higher or lower?
Higher or lower?
Cash flow forecast -
example Jan Feb Mar Total Forecast is normally
CASH INFLOWS produced by month
Investment 10,000 10,000
Sales 2,500 10,000 15,000 27,500
Net cash flow is the
difference each month
Total inflows 12,500 10,000 15,000 37,500
between cash inflows and
CASH OUTFLOWS cash outflows
Raw materials 4,000 5,000 5,000 14,000
Wages & salaries 3,500 4,000 4,000 11,500 Opening balance is the
Marketing 2,500 1,000 2,000 5,500 amount the business starts
Set-up costs 3,000 1,000 0 4,000 with each month
Other costs 2,000 1,000 1,000 4,000
43
30
6
-5 1
1 8
Session 3
Financing the
Start-up
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Q Which of these is a
1 short-term source
of finance?
A Bank
overdra C Bank
loan
ft
B Share
capital D Fixed
assets
Q A bank loan will NOT
2 usually involve which
of the following?
A C
Repaymen Interest on
ts of the the
loan over outstandin
its term g amount
B D
Payment Security
of provided
dividends to the
out of bank
profits
Q The typical investment
3 by a business angel
into a startup is...
A £10k C
£5k to £500k
to
£3.5m
B g above D
Anythin £10k
to
£1m £750k
Q A startup needs finance
to buy fixed assets such
4 as computers. What is
this known as?
A C
Capital Workin
expendit g
ure capital
B D
Revenue Start-
expendit up
ure losses
Q A startup will need to
5 finance...
Dividen
A C
Cash
sales to ds paid
customer to the
Interest bank
B D
s Pre-
on cash
trading
held at
losses
the bank
Key Issues for Start-up
Finance
• How much? Finance needed
– Enough v not too for…
much Business Set-
– Safety buffer up
• When? Day-to-day
– All at once trading
– Drip feed / as
needed Growth
• Challenges
– Keeping control
– Staying afloat
Main sources of start-
up
Internal
finance
External
Sources Sources
Founder finance Credit cards
(personal sources Bank loan
of the
entrepreneur) Bank overdraft
Understanding
the Market
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Some key terms
Market
Demand
share
Elasticity Niche
of demand segment
B Segm
ent
D
Segmen
t
A
Attractions of niche for
a startup
• Smaller & fewer big
competitors
• Chance to add value = better
profit margin
• Easier to reach customers
• Often higher growth of market
Analysing the
market
There are three calculations you need
to be able to complete in order to
analyse market data in Unit 1
• Market size (volume and
value)
• Market growth (percentage
growth)
• Market share (percentage of
the market owned by each
product or competitor)
Have a go!
Dannii & Cheryl are
launching a new fitness
club in Chelsea. In the
first year, they expect to
sell 500 memberships at
£2,000 each. Next year,
the local luxury fitness
market is expected to
grow to 2,500
memberships (this year –
2,250)
Evaluating the market
opportunity
Watch the
video and
then plan
your
answer to
the two
questions
Session 5
Why Start-ups
Fail
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What we’ll cover
• Motives for starting a
business
• Aims and objectives of
start-ups
• Business planning
• What can go wrong
Over to you!
Motives for being an
entrepreneur
• Financial
– Capital gains
– Making a living
• Personal
– Proving people wrong
– Gaining control
– Building something
• Social
– Giving something back
Different Types of Start-
up
Business planning
• Two main purposes:
• A detailed plan for success
• A tool to raise finance
So what can go
wrong with a
business plan?
Over to you!
Why Business Plans
go wrong
• No market in the gap
– Poor market research & unrealistic plan
– Competitor response
• Good idea, poor execution
– Wrong people; poor management
– Growth is too quick (overtrading) or too slow
– Failure to manage cash flow
• External shocks
– Economic change (credit crunch, oil prices)
– Legal & social change
Building a good example
answer
Silverjet
Founded: 2006
Product: Low-
cost, executive
flights to New
York & Dubai
Price – from
£999
Watch the video - then plan
an answer
Session 6
Evaluating the
Start-up
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Putting it all
together
• A tale of two start-ups
• Which would you invest in?
• Which one succeeded?
• Which one failed?
• Top tips for Unit 1
evaluation
A Tale of Two Start-
ups
• Here are two reali-life
start-up stories
• Imagine you are a
potential investor
• What would you want to
know?
Mucky ItsAWrap
Chips
UNIT 1
REVISION
WORKSHOP
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