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Enterprise and Entrepreneurship

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·GCSE Business·Pearson Edexcel 1BS0·8 min
1.1.1 The dynamic nature of business·1.1.2 Risk and reward·1.1.3 The role of business enterprise

Why New Business Ideas Come About

Markets are not static — they shift constantly, and businesses must respond or become irrelevant. The Edexcel specification identifies three drivers that cause new business ideas to emerge.

Changes in technology create opportunities as new capabilities appear. The rise of smartphones made app-based businesses possible: Uber, Deliveroo, and Monzo all depend on mobile hardware and payment infrastructure that simply did not exist in 2005.

Changes in what consumers want reflect evolving tastes, demographics, and values. Growing concern about environmental impact created demand for plant-based food brands such as Oatly (oat milk) and Beyond Meat. A business alert to this shift could enter a growing market; one that ignored it risked declining sales.

Products and services becoming obsolete remove existing businesses but open doors for replacements. Blockbuster's video-rental model was made obsolete by streaming, but that same shift created an enormous opportunity for Netflix.

Key term — dynamic business environment: the constant change in market conditions, technology, and consumer preferences that makes running a business both challenging and full of opportunity.

Original Ideas vs Adapting Existing Products

New business ideas arrive via two routes: original ideas and adaptation of existing products or services.

Original ideas are genuinely new inventions or concepts. James Dyson's bagless vacuum cleaner (1993) solved a real consumer frustration — loss of suction — in a way no existing product did. The idea arose from noticing the problem and engineering a solution from scratch.

Adaptation is more common. Rather than inventing something entirely new, an entrepreneur spots an existing idea and improves, re-targets, or repackages it.

Worked example — Innocent Drinks (1999): The founders did not invent smoothies. Smoothie bars already existed. They adapted the concept by packaging smoothies in bottles for retail sale, targeting busy professionals who wanted convenience. The original idea (blended fruit) was borrowed; the adaptation (chilled retail format, playful branding) was their entrepreneurial contribution.

Worked example — BrewDog (2007): BrewDog entered an existing market (beer). They adapted by focusing on high-alcohol craft beers aimed at consumers bored with mainstream lager, selling direct online and opening their own bars — a new model for an old product category.

Both routes are valid. Examiners will ask you to apply one or both in a business context question.

Risk and Reward in Business

Every entrepreneur faces a trade-off between risk and reward. Taking a risk is unavoidable — what differs is the scale and nature of the risk relative to the potential reward.

Risks of starting a business:

  • Business failure — the business may not survive; many new businesses close within the first three years
  • Financial loss — the entrepreneur may lose money they invested or borrowed, and may take on personal debt
  • Lack of security — no guaranteed income; the entrepreneur may earn less than they would in employment

Rewards of running a successful business:

  • Business success — seeing a venture grow from an idea into a functioning organisation
  • Profit — revenue in excess of costs, which the owner can keep or reinvest
  • Independence — the ability to be your own boss and make your own decisions

Exam tip: 6-mark "justify" questions often ask whether the rewards of starting a business outweigh the risks. Argue both sides — describe specific risks AND specific rewards — then conclude by linking to the context. A graduate launching a low-cost online business faces lower financial risk than someone remortgaging their house to open a restaurant.

The Role of Entrepreneurs

An entrepreneur is a person who organises resources, makes business decisions, and takes on the risks of starting and running a business.

The Edexcel spec highlights three core functions:

  1. Organising resources — bringing together land, labour, capital, and enterprise (the four factors of production) to create a product or service
  2. Making business decisions — deciding what to produce, how much to charge, who to hire, and where to sell
  3. Taking risks — accepting that the business may fail and that their own money (and sometimes their livelihood) is at stake

Worked example — James Dyson: Dyson organised engineers and manufacturing facilities (resources), decided to sell directly to retailers rather than through distributors (business decision), and funded 5,127 prototype iterations over five years with no guarantee of success (risk). The reward was a global appliance brand valued in the billions.

Entrepreneurs are distinct from managers: a manager is employed to run an existing business, whereas an entrepreneur creates and owns the business, bearing the financial risk personally.

Key term — enterprise: the willingness and ability to start a new business, taking on risk in the hope of reward.

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Adding Value: How Businesses Create Worth

Adding value means increasing the worth of a product above the cost of the inputs used to make it. This is the core economic purpose of a business.

Businesses add value through several mechanisms:

MethodWhat it meansExample
ConvenienceMaking the product easier or faster to accessStarbucks charges a premium because the coffee is ready in minutes and available everywhere
BrandingCreating an image or reputation that consumers pay more forNike trainers may use similar materials to a generic shoe, but brand identity justifies a higher price
QualityUsing superior materials or processes that improve the productDyson uses engineering precision to justify prices 3–5× higher than budget vacuums
DesignMaking the product more attractive, functional, or ergonomicApple charges a premium for the aesthetic and usability of its devices
Unique selling point (USP)Offering something no competitor doesBrewDog's limited-edition extreme beers created a USP unavailable elsewhere

Worked example — Innocent Smoothies:

  • Input costs: fruit, packaging, logistics ≈ £0.40 per bottle
  • Selling price: £2.50 per bottle (supermarket)
  • Value added ≈ £2.10 per bottle

Innocent adds value through branding (playful, ethical identity), convenience (ready-to-drink, no preparation), and quality (no added sugar or preservatives). Customers pay the premium because of those additions, not just the fruit.

The Purpose of Business Activity

Business activity serves three interconnected purposes set out in the spec: producing goods or services, meeting customer needs, and adding value.

Producing goods or services:

  • Goods are physical products (a car, a packet of crisps, a textbook)
  • Services are intangible outputs (a haircut, legal advice, a streaming subscription)

Meeting customer needs means identifying what customers want — in terms of price, quality, choice, and convenience — and delivering it. A business that fails to meet customer needs will not generate sales and will not survive.

Adding value (covered in the previous slide) is what allows a business to charge more than its input costs, generating the profit that sustains the enterprise.

These purposes are connected: a business produces a good or service (output), does so in a way that meets customer needs (demand), and adds value in the process (profit). Remove any one of the three and the business model breaks down.

Key term — goods: physical, tangible products that can be stored and transported. Key term — services: intangible outputs that are consumed at the point of delivery.

Exam Technique: Enterprise and Entrepreneurship

Common errors and how to avoid them:

1. Confusing risk with reward

Risk is the possibility of a negative outcome (failure, loss); reward is the positive outcome if the business succeeds. Do not list risks as rewards or vice versa. A common mistake is calling "hard work" a risk — it is a cost, not the same as financial risk.

2. Giving a generic response instead of using context

If the question gives you a specific business (e.g. "Sara is opening a coffee shop in a busy city centre"), your answer must reference that business. "A business faces the risk of failure" scores 1 mark; "Sara risks losing the £30,000 she has invested to fit out her coffee shop if customers don't visit" scores the application mark.

3. Confusing original ideas with adaptation

Adaptation is not copying — it is taking an existing concept and changing it in a meaningful way. Starbucks adapted the Italian coffee bar concept; it did not invent coffee. Examiners accept adaptation as a valid source of entrepreneurial ideas.

4. Forgetting to mention USP when discussing value added

Adding value and having a USP are closely linked. When asked how a business adds value, USP is one of the five methods. Many students list branding and quality but forget to consider USP as a separate method.

5. Mislabelling the factors of production

The four factors are land, labour, capital, and enterprise. Students often write "money" for capital — capital means physical assets and equipment used in production, not cash.

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