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Types of Business. Ch. 22, Section 1. 4 Elements of Business. Expenses What you need to start & continue a business Advertising Introduction and reminder of your business Receipts & Record Keeping Needs to be accurate and dependable – for profits & losses Risk (profit vs. loss)
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Types of Business Ch. 22, Section 1
4 Elements of Business • Expenses • What you need to start & continue a business • Advertising • Introduction and reminder of your business • Receipts & Record Keeping • Needs to be accurate and dependable – for profits & losses • Risk (profit vs. loss) • Risk is a consequence to the advantage of being in business
Establishment of inventory Use of computers/Technology Turbo Tax Time – the opportunity cost. You could be working for someone else. Considerations When Starting a Business
3 Types of Businesses • Sole Proprietorship • Owned by 1 person • Easy & relatively inexpensive to start would be a need • Small businesses typically • Most common form of business • Owner receives all profits • Unlimited Liability
Advantages Receive all profits Quick decisions because no consultation Relatively low taxes Disadvantages Unlimited liability Handle all decisions Time consuming Rely on own funds Business depends on one person Sole Proprietorship
3 Types of Businesses cont. 2. Partnership • Owned by 2 or more individuals • Articles of Partnership – Partners sign an agreement on what each is responsible for. • Limited Partnership • Partners are not equal • General Partner – majority of control • Limited Partner – own a small part – do not voice opinions & are responsible only for what they put in • LLPs (Limited Liability Partnerships) [mix of corporations and partnerships): Very popular with lawyers, accountants, and architects. • Joint Venture • temporary partnership to do a job
Advantages Losses are shared More efficient than proprietorships Pay taxes on share of profit Easier to borrow money Disadvantages Profits are shared Unlimited liability, most of the time Must reach agreements Committed partners Partnership
3 Types of Businesses cont. 3. Corporation • Owned by many • Started by a founder • Owned by Stockholders • Run by a Board of Directors • State government issues a charter to run the business • Complicated structure • Business has the same rights as an individual • Are Double Taxed • Founder’s responsibilities • Register with the state government for a charter • Sell Stock • Select the initial Board of Directors • Board of Director’s responsibility • Elected by Stockholders • Supervise & control the corporation • Make all major decisions
Advantages Owners do not have to devote time to make money. Stockholders have limited liability; they only lose what they put in. Individuals trained in specific areas make decisions. Disadvantages Decisions are slow. Interest of the board may differ from the stockholders. Double taxation. Govt. taxes corporate profit than individual shares. Stockholders have little or no say in how business is run. Corporations
Stock: Individual ownership in a corporation. Shareholder receives voting rights and dividends. Bond: Promise by a corporation to pay a stated amount of interest over a period of time. Stocks and Bonds
Other Types of Businesses • Franchise – sell the name & structure of a business • Help train employees & set up the business • Franchisee – pays a start up fee & annual fee • Non – Profit – business does not run to make money • Cooperative – individual businesses that work together to benefit all members • Producer – Ex: Farmer’s Market • Consumer – Ex: PCC Natural Markets, REI • Service – Ex: Credit Unions, Utility companies