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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 ]

 

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Paper Undergraduate
Bussinuss Communication
Business Communication Relating Redundancies
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Internet Privacy the Main Issue
The main issue that will be addressed here is whether Internet privacy is appropriate in the sense that it can and should be used to control or regulate what is done in the workplace.
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Comcast is the largest cable provider in the United States. The company began life in 1963 in Tupelo, MS. It joined the NASDAQ in 1972. By the mid-1990s Comcast was in acquisition mode, picking up several media…
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The company did not make a profit as Maria believed. The company had $47,000 in revenue, $33,000 in salaries and related operating expenses, plus rent. Even with that, the company also had non-cash items that should…
Essay Doctorate
WTO negotiations and their economic costs and benefits in recent years
In recent years, the WTO Doha Round negotiations, which began in 2001, have faltered. Since negotiations broke down in 2008, WTO ministerial meetings in 2009 and 2011 have failed to even consider the substantive provisions of the Doha Declaration. Mounting concerns have led many nations to craft bilateral, multilateral, and regional agreements to supplement and perhaps replace the negotiations. This paper identifies 6 positive and negative economic costs of stalled negotiations.
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Ravenhill Theories of Globalization: Regionalism
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Service Workers as Robin Leidner\'s
As Robin Leidner's (1993) "Over the Counter: McDonald's" and Jeffrey J. Sallaz's (2002) "The House Rules: Autonomy and Interests Among Service Workers in the Contemporary Casino Industry" both clearly demonstrate,…
Paper Masters
SWOT Analysis: State Street Bank
State Street Bank, founded in 1792, is a United States-based financial services holding company headquartered in the Financial District of Boston, Massachusetts. Traded as STT on the New York Stock Exchange, State Street Bank has seen significant criticisms in recent years, stemming from pending lawsuits against the bank by many of its national branches, many of whom have cited alleged fraud on currency trades and issues with mishandled pensions. However, State Street continuously ranks amongst the "World's Best Banks," as ranked by Global Finance, specifically in the area of asset management (Global Finance, 2009, p. 18). Providing a full-range of services and products for large pools of investment assets, State Street Bank holds $22.8 trillion in assets under custody and $2.1 trillion in assets under management as of 2011, their primary clients are institutional investors (SEC, 2011, p.1) With considerable resources, a world-renowned name and public image, powerful clientele, and consistent innovation and expansion, State Street Bank has carved a niche for itself in the upper-echelons of industry leaders.
Paper Undergraduate
Boomers Context of the Problem
Baby Boomers, an Untapped Advertising Market