Essay Topic Hub

Business
Essays

21,136+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

21,136 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
What is Business?

Whether you are a business major or seeking your MBA, earning a business degree actually involves learning a wide variety of theories, skills, and approaches and then being able to apply them to different scenarios. In fact, the case study is a powerful tool in business education, with students first studying real-life cases to see how business leaders reacted to situations and then with students analyzing how they would react in the same scenario. In fact, some of these case studies have become integral to studying business, so that the top schools for business publish and sell their own case studies.

The study of business usually begins with an examination of the structure of the business environment. This involves an examination of the various types of business structures: sole proprietorships, corporations, limited liability companies, partnerships, cooperatives, and S corporations. It also discusses the various stakeholders in a business and how their interests impact business goals and ways of doing business. The study of business also examines how the external environment impacts an organization’s growth, including factors like the globalization of business.

Another critical area of study for is human resources. While the study of human resources touches on some of the laws that govern employers and employees, it also goes beyond the law. Human resources also focuses on business communication and ensuring that employees and managers are properly trained to communicate effectively. Human resources generally oversees organizational training, therefore motivation, leadership, management, corporate culture, and crises management all fall under the human resources’ umbrella.

Of course, no study of business is complete without an understanding of accounting and finance. Understanding money helps a business major understand how to get funding for a venture, how to approach working capital, how to develop a budget, and how to handle incoming and outgoing accounts. The study of finance may also touch on more complicated concepts such as ratio analysis and even delve into assessment of the stock market. However, a more in-depth study of finance and accounting is usually done in tailored accounting or finance courses.

Marketing is also an important topic in business. Outside of the business realm, marketing is often confused with advertising. However, marketing involves much more than advertising a product. Marketing is concerned with the 4Ps: selecting a Product; determining the Price; selecting a distribution channel or Place; and developing a Promotion strategy. One element of marketing is understanding supply and demand, which is often taught to students through the use of Forio’s Root Beer Game. Furthermore, with globalization, global marketing strategies and the use of e-commerce have become critical elements in marketing.

Finally, the study of business looks at operations management. While operations management may seem like a catch-all phrase, its overarching goal is to ensure streamlined business processes that optimize efficiency. Operations management examines: costs and revenues; profits; break even analysis; production planning; distribution channels; project management; and quality assurance. In fact, much of the continuing education and training that business people receive is focused on operations management; a Six Sigma black belt can be described as an expert in operations management.  [ Show Less ]

 

21,136 papers
Sort by:
Thesis Doctorate
Lex on Praetorian Provinces
The Roman administrative system changed after C. Gracchus' reform in the year 122 B.C.; this followed the introduction of a provincial reptundarum (Brennan, 2000). There was an annexation of new territorial provinces…
Paper Doctorate
Exit Strategies in International Business
When a company starts a venture nationally or internationally, it needs to have a plan of how it would enter the new market, capture the market and exit when the task is completed. The last part is also known as an exit…
Paper Undergraduate
Zimbabwe: geographic, economic, and political overview
The work of Hall (1982) relates how primary message systems in a culture serve to communicate the values and norms of that culture and are the instructions that everyone in that culture receives on what is considered…
Paper Undergraduate
Global companies and their market strategies
When considering the ever-changing and highly competitive global landscape of business today, firms must stay at the cutting edge of their respective fields in order to sustain profitability in the long-term.
Paper Undergraduate
Business intelligence strategy and implementation
Describing individual mental capabilities and processes to one another serves to help broaden minds and fully realize understanding and learning. In developing my three-step plan to business intelligence success, I…
Paper Doctorate
Walmart business strategies and competitive positioning
It has taken Wal-Mart a few decades to become the multi-billion dollar conglomerate it is today. Surely, this time did not come without trials for the corporation, but it is worth asking what exactly made Wal-Mart the…
Paper Undergraduate
Sacramento San Joaquin Delta Issue
Throughout the annals of American history the development of California from a parched desert to thriving center of agriculture and commerce remains one of the nation's most incredible achievements.
Paper Masters
Entering the conversation: frameworks and approaches
This paper will argue that Gerald Graff is correct: the university and college system is secretive and vague. This secrecy, opacity, and lack of democracy ultimately contributes to the failure of students at the university level and likely in the professional realms. It is true that a portion of the responsibility to be prepared is upon the student. There is no doubt about that. Yet education, particularly in the 21st century, has increasingly failed students in preparation for and success in college. As Graff argues, there is a distinctive lack of transparency in academic at the university level and it is a problem with several systemic effects.
Paper Undergraduate
Strategic choices in organizational decision-making
Strategic Choices - SWOT "Competitive advantage" is approached with the seriousness of a science involving carefully chosen strategies for cost advantage and/or differentiation advantage. Achieving one or both of those advantages through the use of one or more of four strategic business methods ideally gives a company a significant competitive edge over its competitors. The Coca-Cola Company apparently uses three of these strategies to achieve a premiere position in the global beverage industry. The achievement of competitive advantage is an apparently tireless quest using one or more of four basic strategies. "Low Cost" concentrates on delivering an equal or better product at a lower cost. "Differentiation" concentrates on delivering or at least seeming to deliver a product with more and/or better benefits than products delivered by one's competition. "Focus" uses either cost advantage or differentiation advantage in a targeted, narrow market. "Preemption" concentrates on being the first to innovate, produce, distribute, market, or engage in some other competitive business aspect. Using one or more of these strategies successfully can create a "superior value" giving a company a sustained competitive advantage over its competitors.
Paper Doctorate
Measuring unethical behaviors in organizations with concrete ratios
Exercise 1 How would you measure the unethical behavior in an organization?