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A market where there are: - Numerous firms - Identical products - Many buyers - no restrictions to enter/exit the market - Established firms have no advantage over new firms - Sellers and buyers are well-informed about prices |
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Largest petroleum company |
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Largest Defense/Aerospace Company |
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Largest pharmaceuticals company |
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Largest consumer goods company |
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Largest telecommunications company |
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Largest insurance company |
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Largest manufacturing company |
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Largest transportation company |
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Largest conglomerate company |
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Largest supermarket company |
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Largest computer hardware company |
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Largest computer software company |
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Largest computer peripherals company |
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Largest microprocessors company |
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Largest semiconductors company |
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Largest biotechnology company |
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Largest health care company |
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Business owned and controlled by one person and is the most common type |
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Sole proprietorship advantages |
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- It's simple to form - A sense of independence - Satisfaction of running your own business - Profit is yours |
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Sole proprietorship disadvantages |
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unlimited liability - Total responsibility for every aspect - Limited growth - Lack of longevity - 9/10 businesses fail in the first five years |
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Business owned and operated by two or more people -- least common in the US |
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Share decision making Access to more capital |
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Partnership disadvantages |
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-Unlimited liability (except for limited partners) -Conflicts with partners -Limited longevity |
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Owned and controlled by shareholders The most influential in the US Legally a person |
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as a shareholder you have limited liability and you can profit without working there As a corp you can raise capital easily: if a company needs money it can issue more stock Longevity |
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Corporation disadvantages |
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- Slowness of decision making - Complexity of becoming incorporated - Government regulations and restrictions - Double tax on profits |
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It is a contract in which a company agrees to allow someone to establish a business using its name to sell goods and services |
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Training for management and employees National advertising Financial assistance |
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Have to give up a certain percentage of profits Have to pay a fee to begin a franchise Have to follow their guidelines and standards |
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Businesses owned and operated by people who use its services (credit unions) Marketing co-ops: sunmaid, sunkist, land-o-lakes |
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usually able to control the buying and the selling of your good or service |
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You usually have to be a member of the co-op to get the advantages |
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Business that provides a g/s w/o seeking a profit |
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not taxed on their revenue usually have a positive relationship with the public |
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often dependent upon financial contributions from others |
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market with a single supplier of a g/s 1. g/s has no legit substitute 2. there are (legal or natural) barriers to entry ex. public water |
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- A large # of firms compete - Each has a small market share - Can only influence the price of its own product - Collusion (companies working together to fix prices) is impossible - Each firm produces a slightly different product - Firms compete on price, quality, and marketing - Firms are free to enter or exit the market |
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When one company takes over/buys another |
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Totally absorb (Macy's - Jordan March) Retain brand name (AOL - Time-warner) Create new entity (Altria Group - Phillip Morris + Kraft) |
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Vertical: different aspects of a a business Horizontal: same business Conglomerate: different businesses |
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Consolidates an industry Increased size = more capital Cut costs - overlapping More efficient centralized planning |
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- Less competition: price goes up - Becomes bloated - Rise in unemployment - Failure to integrate (just because you have the money to buy a company doesn't mean you know how to run it) |
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