Business Management HL
Business Management HL
6
Chapters
223
Notes
Unit 1 - Introduction To Business Management - QB
Unit 1 - Introduction To Business Management - QB
Unit 2 - Human Resource Management - QB
Unit 2 - Human Resource Management - QB
Unit 3 - Finance & accounts - QB
Unit 3 - Finance & accounts - QB
Unit 4 - Marketing - QB
Unit 4 - Marketing - QB
Unit 5 - Operations management - QB
Unit 5 - Operations management - QB
Unit 6 - Assessment
Unit 6 - Assessment
IB Resources
Unit 1 - Introduction To Business Management - QB
Business Management HL
Business Management HL

Unit 1 - Introduction To Business Management - QB

Unraveling For-Profit Social Enterprises: Purpose Over Profit

Word Count Emoji
603 words
Reading Time Emoji
4 mins read
Updated at Emoji
Last edited onย 5th Nov 2024

Table of content

Hey there! Ever wondered how a business can earn money and do good at the same time? Let's explore!

What's a social enterprise? ๐ŸŒ

  • It's like a superhero business: it has a mission to save the world (or at least part of it) while earning some cash.
  • The main mission: Improve human, social, or environmental well-being.

The difference from regular businesses ๐Ÿšซ

  • Social enterprises have the usual business stuff (legal existence, management, reporting), BUT their primary goal is always the social mission, not just making profits.

๐Ÿค“ Example: TOMs is a for-profit social enterprise. When you buy a pair of shoes from them, a kid in need gets a pair too!

Different forms of social enterprises

  • Private Sector Companies: Like TOMs. They mix business with kindness.
  • Public Sector Companies: These folks team up with governments.
    • Example: Companies making meals for older folks who can't cook.
  • Cooperatives: Run by a bunch of people who own and operate the business. It's like a community of business owners.
    • Types of Co-operatives
      • Financial Cooperative: Kind-hearted banks.
        • Example: Credit unions lend money at low rates.
      • Housing Cooperative: Offers affordable housing for members. Imagine living in a building where everyone's a friend!
      • Workers' Cooperative: The employees run the show!
        • Example: If a business is sinking, the employees can band together, take over, and revive it.
      • Producer Cooperative: Producers joining hands for better production.
        • Example: Grape farmers creating wine together.
      • Consumer Cooperative: Owned by consumers, offering goods/services at lower prices.
        • Example: Some grocery stores in Europe & the U.S.

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IB Resources
Unit 1 - Introduction To Business Management - QB
Business Management HL
Business Management HL

Unit 1 - Introduction To Business Management - QB

Unraveling For-Profit Social Enterprises: Purpose Over Profit

Word Count Emoji
603 words
Reading Time Emoji
4 mins read
Updated at Emoji
Last edited onย 5th Nov 2024

Table of content

Hey there! Ever wondered how a business can earn money and do good at the same time? Let's explore!

What's a social enterprise? ๐ŸŒ

  • It's like a superhero business: it has a mission to save the world (or at least part of it) while earning some cash.
  • The main mission: Improve human, social, or environmental well-being.

The difference from regular businesses ๐Ÿšซ

  • Social enterprises have the usual business stuff (legal existence, management, reporting), BUT their primary goal is always the social mission, not just making profits.

๐Ÿค“ Example: TOMs is a for-profit social enterprise. When you buy a pair of shoes from them, a kid in need gets a pair too!

Different forms of social enterprises

  • Private Sector Companies: Like TOMs. They mix business with kindness.
  • Public Sector Companies: These folks team up with governments.
    • Example: Companies making meals for older folks who can't cook.
  • Cooperatives: Run by a bunch of people who own and operate the business. It's like a community of business owners.
    • Types of Co-operatives
      • Financial Cooperative: Kind-hearted banks.
        • Example: Credit unions lend money at low rates.
      • Housing Cooperative: Offers affordable housing for members. Imagine living in a building where everyone's a friend!
      • Workers' Cooperative: The employees run the show!
        • Example: If a business is sinking, the employees can band together, take over, and revive it.
      • Producer Cooperative: Producers joining hands for better production.
        • Example: Grape farmers creating wine together.
      • Consumer Cooperative: Owned by consumers, offering goods/services at lower prices.
        • Example: Some grocery stores in Europe & the U.S.

Unlock the Full Content! File Is Locked Emoji

Dive deeper and gain exclusive access to premium files of Business Management HL. Subscribe now and get closer to that 45 ๐ŸŒŸ