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 5 - Operations management - QB
Business Management HL
Business Management HL

Unit 5 - Operations management - QB

Unlock High Labour & Capital Productivity Tips & Formulas Revealed

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

Table of content

Labour productivity πŸ•°πŸ‘·β€β™‚οΈ

  • Definition: Labour productivity is basically a "scorecard" of how efficient a worker is. It tells you the value of goods or services a worker creates within a certain time frame, usually every hour.

  • Why it matters?: With this, businesses can:

    • Spot the superstar employees 🌟
    • Identify if someone is having a bad day (or maybe a bad month? πŸ€”)
  • Real-World Example: Imagine a warehouse where workers are packing boxes πŸ“¦:

    • Average worker: Packs 15 boxes every hour
    • But Tom only packs 12 boxes every hour πŸ˜“
    • Result? Tom might need a pep talk or some training! πŸ—£οΈ
  • Formula Time!

 

Labour Productivity = \(\frac{Total\, Output\, (like \,boxes \,packed)}{Total \,Hours \,Worked} \)

Bigger Picture: You can use this formula for

  • Just one worker
  • A team 🀝
  • Everyone in a company
  • Heck, even an entire country when economists feel fancy! 🌍

Capital productivity πŸ’ΌπŸ’°

  • Definition: Think of capital productivity as a measure of how good a business is at using its money (capital) to make more money. And by capital, we mainly mean working capital.
  • So, What's Working Capital?
    • It’s the difference between a company's current assets (like cash or stocks) and its current liabilities (like debt or owed expenses).
    • In simple words, it's the money the business has on hand to pay for day-to-day stuff.
  • Formul Alert!Working Capital=Current Assets−Current LiabilitiesWorking Capital=Current Assets−Current Liabilities And, for capital productivity.

 

Working Capital Productivity =\(\frac{Sales\ Revenue}{Working\ Capital }\)

  • But Context is Key! πŸ—οΈ
    • These numbers mean nothing without some context.
    • Always look at industry standards, competitors, and trends to make sense of your results.
  • Real-World Example: Let’s say Company A makes $100,000 in sales with a working capital of $20,000. Their working capital productivity would be 5. This sounds great, but if their competitor, Company B, has a productivity of 8, then Company A might need to up their game!

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IB Resources
Unit 5 - Operations management - QB
Business Management HL
Business Management HL

Unit 5 - Operations management - QB

Unlock High Labour & Capital Productivity Tips & Formulas Revealed

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

Table of content

Labour productivity πŸ•°πŸ‘·β€β™‚οΈ

  • Definition: Labour productivity is basically a "scorecard" of how efficient a worker is. It tells you the value of goods or services a worker creates within a certain time frame, usually every hour.

  • Why it matters?: With this, businesses can:

    • Spot the superstar employees 🌟
    • Identify if someone is having a bad day (or maybe a bad month? πŸ€”)
  • Real-World Example: Imagine a warehouse where workers are packing boxes πŸ“¦:

    • Average worker: Packs 15 boxes every hour
    • But Tom only packs 12 boxes every hour πŸ˜“
    • Result? Tom might need a pep talk or some training! πŸ—£οΈ
  • Formula Time!

 

Labour Productivity = \(\frac{Total\, Output\, (like \,boxes \,packed)}{Total \,Hours \,Worked} \)

Bigger Picture: You can use this formula for

  • Just one worker
  • A team 🀝
  • Everyone in a company
  • Heck, even an entire country when economists feel fancy! 🌍

Capital productivity πŸ’ΌπŸ’°

  • Definition: Think of capital productivity as a measure of how good a business is at using its money (capital) to make more money. And by capital, we mainly mean working capital.
  • So, What's Working Capital?
    • It’s the difference between a company's current assets (like cash or stocks) and its current liabilities (like debt or owed expenses).
    • In simple words, it's the money the business has on hand to pay for day-to-day stuff.
  • Formul Alert!Working Capital=Current Assets−Current LiabilitiesWorking Capital=Current Assets−Current Liabilities And, for capital productivity.

 

Working Capital Productivity =\(\frac{Sales\ Revenue}{Working\ Capital }\)

  • But Context is Key! πŸ—οΈ
    • These numbers mean nothing without some context.
    • Always look at industry standards, competitors, and trends to make sense of your results.
  • Real-World Example: Let’s say Company A makes $100,000 in sales with a working capital of $20,000. Their working capital productivity would be 5. This sounds great, but if their competitor, Company B, has a productivity of 8, then Company A might need to up their game!

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 🌟

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