In simple terms
A friendly intro before the formal notes — no formulas yet.
From Idea to Enterprise
A business is an organisation that combines resources — people, things and money — to produce goods or services that satisfy customers' needs and wants. It takes inputs, transforms them through a process, and sells outputs for more than the inputs cost, adding value along the way.
Think of running a coffee cart outside a busy station. You spot a need (commuters want caffeine) and a want (they'd rather have a smooth flat white than instant). You bring together the resources: a pitch on the pavement and coffee beans (land), your skill as a barista (labour), an espresso machine bought with savings (capital), and the idea and nerve to set the whole thing up (enterprise). The transformation is turning beans, milk and water into a hot drink. The output is a flat white a commuter happily pays £3 for — far more than the 40p of beans and milk inside it. That gap is the value you have added, and it is where your profit comes from.
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Spot a need or want in the market — commuters wanting good coffee near the station.
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Combine the four factors of production: land (the pitch and the beans), labour (your barista skill), capital (the espresso machine) and enterprise (the idea and the risk of setting up).
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Run the transformation through the four business functions working together: operations makes the coffee, marketing brings the queue, HR manages any staff, finance watches the cash.
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Sell the output to customers for more than the inputs cost — adding value — and, if the sums work, earning a profit that rewards the risk you took.
Explore the concept
Use the live diagram and synced steps — play it or tap a step card to walk through.
Key formulas
Tap any symbol to reveal exactly what it means and its units.
Tap a symbol — great for exam definitions
Full topic notes
Formal explanation with the rigour you need for the exam.
The nature of a business: combining resources to satisfy needs and wants
A business is an organisation that combines human, physical and financial resources to produce goods and/or services that satisfy the needs and wants of customers. Read that definition slowly, because every phrase in it is load-bearing. 'Combines resources' means a business is fundamentally a coordinator — it brings separate inputs together. Those resources come in three kinds: human (the people who work), physical (the premises, machinery and materials) and financial (the money that pays for it all). 'Produce goods and/or services' means the output can be a tangible good you can touch or an intangible service you experience. And 'satisfy the needs and wants of customers' is the point of the whole exercise: a need is something essential (food, shelter, healthcare) while a want is a preference for how that need is met (a particular restaurant, a designer coat, a premium phone). Businesses that read needs and wants well thrive; those that ignore them fail.
Human resources: the people — employees, managers, the entrepreneur — whose effort and skill drive the business.
Physical resources: the tangible things used in production — premises, machinery, equipment, raw materials, stock.
Financial resources: the money the business needs to buy the other resources and keep operating — from savings, loans, investors or revenue.
Needs vs wants: a need is essential (food, water, shelter); a want is a preference for how it is satisfied (a specific brand, style or experience). Businesses profit by satisfying wants, not just needs.
Goods vs services: goods are tangible (a car, a coffee); services are intangible (insurance, a haircut, streaming). Many businesses sell both — a phone (good) with a warranty and support (service).
The factors of production
The resources a business combines are grouped into four categories called the factors of production. Land is all the natural resources used in production — not only the physical site the business sits on, but the raw materials, water, minerals and physical space it draws on. Labour is human effort, both physical and mental: the workers, managers and specialists whose time and skill turn inputs into outputs. Capital is the stock of human-made resources used to produce goods and services — machinery, tools, vehicles, buildings and the finance used to acquire them (be careful: in Business Management 'capital' can mean either the physical equipment or the money, and the meaning is usually clear from context). Enterprise is the factor that makes the other three productive: it is the willingness to organise land, labour and capital, decide what to make, and accept the risk of loss in pursuit of a reward. A useful memory hook is L-L-C-E, but the marks come from applying each factor to a real business, not from listing them.
Land — natural resources: the site, raw materials, water, minerals, physical space.
Labour — human physical and mental effort: workers, managers, specialists.
Capital — human-made resources used in production: machinery, tools, vehicles, buildings, and the finance to buy them.
Enterprise — the organising, risk-bearing factor that combines the other three and drives the business forward.
Enterprise is what turns three idle resources into a working business — which is why the entrepreneur sits at the centre of Unit 1.1.
Sectors of activity and sectoral change
Businesses are classified by where in the economy their activity sits. The primary sector extracts and harvests natural resources — farming, fishing, forestry, mining and oil extraction. The secondary sector manufactures and constructs — turning those raw materials into finished or semi-finished goods, from steel and processed food to houses and cars. The tertiary sector provides services to consumers and other businesses — retail, transport, banking, hospitality, healthcare, education — and in most developed economies it is by far the largest. The quaternary sector is a knowledge-based sub-group of the tertiary sector, covering research and development, information technology and data services. Crucially, the balance between these sectors shifts as an economy develops — a process called sectoral change. Poorer, developing economies tend to be dominated by the primary sector; industrialisation shifts weight into the secondary sector; and as incomes, technology and productivity rise, employment and output move increasingly into the tertiary and quaternary sectors. A single product typically moves through several sectors on its journey, which is exactly the chain of production.
Primary: extraction of natural resources (farming, mining, fishing, forestry).
Secondary: manufacturing and construction (food processing, car assembly, house building).
Tertiary: provision of services (retail, transport, banking, hospitality) — usually the largest sector in developed economies.
Quaternary: knowledge and information services (R&D, IT consultancy, data) — a sub-group of the tertiary sector.
Sectoral change: as economies develop, dominance typically shifts primary → secondary → tertiary/quaternary. This is driven by rising incomes, technology and productivity.
The chain of production
The chain of production is the sequence of stages a product passes through from raw material to final customer, with value added at every link. Consider a wooden dining chair. It begins in the primary sector, where a forestry business fells and sells timber. It moves to the secondary sector, where a furniture manufacturer cuts, shapes, assembles and finishes the wood into a chair. It then enters the tertiary sector, where a distributor transports the chair and a retailer displays and sells it to the customer. Each business in the chain buys the output of the one before it, adds value through its own transformation, and sells it on for more. The chain shows two big ideas at once: how the sectors connect into a single productive system, and how value accumulates step by step until the finished product reaches the person who wanted it. When a business controls more than one link — say a company that both manufactures and retails — it is capturing value added at multiple stages of the chain.
The concept of adding value
A successful business does not simply resell its inputs at cost — it transforms them into something worth more, and that increase is called added value. Formally, added value is the difference between the price of the finished good or service and the cost of the bought-in materials and components used to make it. It is created by everything the business does in between: the skill of manufacture, the strength of the brand built through marketing, the convenience of the location, the quality of the customer service. Added value is what lets a business charge a price above its input costs, and it is the source from which profit is drawn — but it is not the same as profit. This is one of the most heavily penalised confusions in Unit 1, so hold the distinction firmly: added value subtracts only bought-in materials, whereas profit subtracts every cost the business bears.
Value added = selling price of the finished good/service − cost of bought-in materials and components
In a case-study question, never stop at defining added value — show HOW the named business adds it. Compare 'added value is price minus material cost' (a definition, worth an AO1 knowledge mark at most) with 'Lush adds value not merely by mixing ingredients but through its ethical sourcing and theatrical in-store experience, which let it charge a premium' (definition PLUS application to the business, earning the AO2 mark too). Application to the specific context is what the marks are really for.
The main business functions and how they interrelate
Whatever its sector, a business is run through four functions that must work together. Human resources manages the people — recruitment, training, motivation, workforce planning. Finance manages the money — raising funds, controlling costs, recording transactions, judging whether decisions are affordable. Marketing identifies and satisfies customer needs profitably — researching the market, designing the product, setting the price, promoting it and getting it to customers. Operations manages the transformation of inputs into outputs — production, quality, capacity and the supply chain. The examiner's favourite point is that these functions are interdependent: none succeeds alone. Marketing can promise next-day delivery, but only operations can produce fast enough and only finance can fund the extra stock; HR must recruit and train the staff who make the promise real. A decision in one function ripples through the others, which is why strong businesses coordinate them rather than run them as silos.
Human resources (HR): recruitment, training, motivation and workforce planning — managing the people.
Finance: raising and controlling money, recording transactions, judging affordability — managing the money.
Marketing: researching, designing, pricing, promoting and distributing to satisfy customers profitably — managing demand.
Operations: producing outputs from inputs, with the right quality, capacity and supply chain — managing the transformation.
Interrelation: the functions are interdependent — a marketing promise needs operations to deliver it, finance to fund it and HR to staff it. Coordination, not silos, is what makes them work.
The entrepreneur and reasons for starting a business
An entrepreneur is the individual who supplies the factor of enterprise: they bring the other factors of production together, decide what to produce, and take the financial risk of setting up, owning and running the venture in pursuit of a reward. Entrepreneurs are typically described as innovative, willing to take calculated risks, hard-working, resilient and good at spotting opportunities. People start businesses for a mix of financial and non-financial reasons. Financial motives include earning a profit and building personal wealth. Non-financial motives include the desire for independence — being your own boss — the chance to pursue a personal passion or interest, the satisfaction of filling a clear gap in the market, and increasingly, social or ethical objectives such as tackling an environmental problem or supporting a community. Most real founders are driven by several of these at once. A closely related idea is the intrapreneur: an employee inside a larger organisation who behaves entrepreneurially — generating ideas and taking risks — but backed by the company's resources rather than their own, as with staff given time to develop new products within an established firm.
Who: the entrepreneur supplies enterprise — combining the factors of production and bearing the risk of the venture.
Financial reasons to start up: to earn a profit and build personal wealth.
Non-financial reasons: independence (being your own boss), pursuing a passion, filling a gap in the market, gaining market share, and social or ethical aims.
Entrepreneur vs intrapreneur: an entrepreneur risks their own resources on a new venture; an intrapreneur innovates and takes risks within an existing firm, backed by the company's resources.
In a case study, identify which motive(s) drive the named founder — application to their actual situation earns the marks, not a generic list.
Common mistakes examiners penalise
Confusing added value with profit — added value subtracts only bought-in materials; profit subtracts ALL costs. Treating them as equal, or saying a value-adding business must be profitable, loses marks and misreads the whole topic.
Defining instead of applying — writing a textbook definition in a question that asks you to explain something about a NAMED business. The definition earns an AO1 knowledge mark at best; the AO2 application mark needs the point tied to that specific business's context.
Mislabelling sectors — putting steel-making in the primary sector or a car factory in the tertiary. Extraction is primary, manufacture is secondary, services are tertiary; classify the specific activity, not the industry's name.
Treating 'capital' as only money — in Business Management, capital as a factor of production means the human-made resources used to produce (machinery, equipment) as well as the finance. Read the context.
Calling enterprise just 'having an idea' — enterprise is combining the other three factors AND bearing the risk. Leaving out the risk-and-organisation element gives an incomplete definition.
Assuming all businesses aim for profit — charities, NGOs and social enterprises are businesses with social objectives. A blanket 'businesses exist to make profit' misses non-profit and social-enterprise contexts the case study may test.
Listing the functions without their interrelation — the higher marks come from explaining how HR, finance, marketing and operations depend on one another, not from four separate definitions.
Making generic points in an application question — a valid but unapplied point scores the knowledge mark only; the engine specifically rewards points anchored to the given business over generic ones.
Model answer — marked the way our engine marks it
Business Management SL papers are points-assessed: there is no single all-or-nothing 'level', instead each distinct valid point you make earns a mark, and each mark carries an assessment objective. AO1 credits correct knowledge (the right concept, defined or identified correctly). AO2 credits application — the same point tied to the specific business or context in the question. AO3 credits analysis and evaluation in the longer response questions. In a short 'explain' question like the one below, the marks split between knowing the concept and applying it, so a bare definition can only ever earn half of what an applied point earns. Study how each mark is pinned to a distinct, named idea rather than to loose or repeated phrasing.
Where this leads
Everything in this lesson is scaffolding for the rest of the course. The factors of production and the business functions reappear the moment you study business objectives, organisational structure and human resource management. Adding value is the thread running through operations management (how the transformation is designed) and marketing (how customers perceive worth). The entrepreneur and the reasons for starting up lead straight into the next lessons on types of business organisation and business objectives. Master the habit built here — define the concept, then apply it to the specific business in front of you, one distinct point at a time — and you have the exact technique that turns knowledge into marks on every Business Management paper you will sit.
Worked examples
See the formulas applied — reveal one step at a time, like the exam.
A bakery, 'The Rolling Pin', buys flour, yeast and other ingredients for £1.50 per loaf of artisan sourdough. It also pays £0.50 per loaf for electricity and packaging. It sells each loaf for £4.00. (a) Calculate the value added per loaf. (b) Explain why the value added is not the same as the profit per loaf.
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(a) Value added per loaf. Value added uses only the cost of bought-in materials — not the transformation costs like electricity.
A furniture maker, 'Oak & Anvil', buys raw oak for £120 per table and metal fittings and varnish for a further £30. Skilled carpenters, workshop energy and tool wear cost £90 per table. The finished table sells to a retailer for £500. Calculate (a) the value added per table and (b) the profit per table, and comment on the difference.
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(a) Value added per table.
Explain two ways in which a named business adds value to its products. [4]
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Model answer (named business: Aroma, an independent coffee roaster and café).
How it all connects
The big idea sits in the middle — tap a linked idea to explore the link.
Tap a linked idea to see how it connects back to the main topic — that connection is what examiners reward.
Glossary
Try to recall each definition before you reveal it.
Quick check
Answer in your head first — then tap to check. No pressure.
Revision flashcards
Flip the card. Test yourself before the exam.
What is a business?
An organisation that combines human, physical and financial resources to produce goods and/or provide services that satisfy the needs and wants of customers.
Key takeaways
Review these before you close the topic — retrieval beats re-reading.
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Human resources: the people — employees, managers, the entrepreneur — whose effort and skill drive the business.
- ✓
Physical resources: the tangible things used in production — premises, machinery, equipment, raw materials, stock.
- ✓
Financial resources: the money the business needs to buy the other resources and keep operating — from savings, loans, investors or revenue.
- ✓
Needs vs wants: a need is essential (food, water, shelter); a want is a preference for how it is satisfied (a specific brand, style or experience). Businesses profit by satisfying wants, not just needs.
- ✓
Goods vs services: goods are tangible (a car, a coffee); services are intangible (insurance, a haircut, streaming). Many businesses sell both — a phone (good) with a warranty and support (service).
Practice — then mark it
The whole point: a real Cambridge question, marked mark-by-mark.
Get a Paper 2-style question marked: explain two ways a named business adds value, point by point with application
Get a Paper 2-style question marked: explain two ways a named business adds value, point by point with application
Extra simulations & links
PhET, GeoGebra and other curated tools — open in a new tab.
Frequently asked
Checkpoint
One marked question is worth ten re-reads — close the loop before you move on.
Reading it isn’t knowing it — prove it.
Before you move on: do Get a Paper 2-style question marked: explain two ways a named business adds value, point by point with application on paper, snap a photo, and get examiner-style feedback on exactly where you win and lose marks.