260 likes | 440 Views
Business Organizations. CHAPTER 7. SECTION 1: Sole Proprietorships SECTION 2: Partnerships SECTION 3: Corporations SECTION 4: Other Forms of Organizations. SECTION 1. Objectives:. What are the advantages of establishing a sole proprietorship?
E N D
Business Organizations CHAPTER 7 SECTION 1: Sole Proprietorships SECTION 2: Partnerships SECTION 3: Corporations SECTION 4: Other Forms of Organizations
SECTION 1 Objectives: • What are the advantages of establishing a sole proprietorship? • What are the disadvantages of establishing a sole proprietorship? Sole Proprietorships
SECTION 1 Advantages to a sole proprietorship: Sole Proprietorships • easy to start up • full control of the business by the owner • exclusive rights to profits by the owner
Disadvantages to a sole proprietorship: SECTION 1 Sole Proprietorships • unlimited liability by the owner • sole responsibility of the owner to operate the business • limited growth potential for the business • lack of longevity of the firm
Objectives: SECTION 2 • How do general partnerships and limited partnerships differ? • What are the advantages of organizing a partnership? • What are the disadvantages of organizing a partnership? Partnerships
SECTION 2 Partnerships Differences between general partnerships and limited partnerships: • General partnerships: • Partners have equal decision-making authority. • Each partner has unlimited liability. • Limited partnerships: • Partners join as investors. • Partners have in inactive role in decision making. • Partners have limited liability.
Advantages of apartnership: SECTION 2 Partnerships • easy to form • allow specialization • lets partners share decision making • shares business losses between partners
Disadvantages of a partnership: SECTION 2 Partnerships • unlimited liability by partners • potential for conflict among partners • lack of business longevity
Objectives: SECTION 3 • How is a corporation formed, and what are the characteristics of a corporation? • How is a corporation organized? • How do stocks and bonds differ? • What are the advantages and disadvantages of organizing a corporation? Corporations
To form a corporation: SECTION 3 Corporations • Submit an application for the articles of incorporation and obtain a corporate charter.
Information required by the articles of incorporation: Corporations SECTION 3 • the name and purpose of the proposed corporation • the address of the corporate headquarters • the method of fundraising to be used by the corporation • the amount of money the corporation expects to raise • the names and addresses of the major corporate officers • the intended life of the corporation
Characteristics of a corporation: SECTION 3 Corporations • legally distinct from its owners • treated as an individual—can own property, hire workers, pay taxes, sue and be sued, and make and sell products
Corporate structure: SECTION 3 Corporations • sometimes owned by shareholders • headed by a board of directors to make decisions • run by corporate officers—CEO, president, vice presidents, etc.—who carry out decisions made by the board • made up of department heads and other employees to perform day-to-day tasks
SECTION 3 Corporations Differences between stocks and bonds: • Stocks: • represent ownership of the firms • issued as shares • Bonds: • used to raise money • issued as a certificate in exchange for money borrowed from an investor
SECTION 3 Advantages of organizing a corporation: Corporations • limited liability • separation of ownership from management • ease of raising capital • longevity
Disadvantages of organizing a corporation: Corporations SECTION 3 • costly and difficult to obtain a corporate charter • number of government regulations to follow • slow decision-making process
Objectives: SECTION 4 Other Forms of Organizations • How do vertical combinations differ from horizontal and conglomerate combinations? • Why might a business owner decide to open a franchise? • What is the customer’s role in a cooperative? • How does a nonprofit organization differ from other types of business organizations?
SECTION 4 Difference between vertical combinations and horizontal and conglomerate combinations: Other Forms of Organizations • Vertical combinations—two or more companies involved in different production phases of the same good or service • Horizontal combinations—two or more companies produce the same good or service • Conglomerate combinations—two or more companies produce unrelated products
Vertical Combination in History • United States Steel Corporation, 1901 • Andrew Carnegie • Merged two or more companies involved in different production phases of the same good or service • Combined companies that owned ore deposits, iron mines, steel mills, railroads, and shipping lines • Today = USX 10 % of all US manufactured steel
Horizontal Combination in History • Standard Oil • John D. Rockefeller • Merged two or more companies producing the same good or service • “oil refining” • Later broken up as a “trust”
SECTION 4 Other Forms of Organizations Benefits of opening a franchise to a business owner: • A business owner can reduce the overall costs associated with starting a business because: • employee training is often provided by parent company • advertising is sometimes paid for by parent company • it can use the parent company’s name
The customer’s role in a cooperative: SECTION 4 Other Forms of Organizations • owns a share in the business • shares the expense of running the business
SECTION 4 Differences between a nonprofit organization and other types of business organizations: Other Forms of Organizations • not focused on financial gain • income not taxed by the government
CHAPTER 7 Wrap-Up 1. Why is a sole proprietorship the easiest type of business to establish? 2. How does forming a partnership solve many of the problems that are associated with sole proprietorships? 3. Compare stocks and corporate bonds. How do corporations raise money through stocks and bonds? 4. Legally, how is a corporation treated as an individual?
CHAPTER 7 Wrap-Up 5. Explain how vertical combinations differ from horizontal combinations. Describe how Andrew Carnegie created a vertical combination. 6. How do nonprofit organizations differ from other forms of business organizations?