This study material has been compiled and organized from various sources, including lecture slides (copy-pasted text) and an audio transcript, to provide a comprehensive overview of key business concepts. All content is presented in English.
📚 Introduction to Business Management Fundamentals
This study guide covers essential topics in business management, including Human Resources, Accounting and Finance, Operations, Marketing, Social Responsibility, Ethics, Law, and Environmental Sustainability. It aims to provide a structured understanding of how businesses operate and manage their various functions.
1. 🧑🤝👩 Human Resources Management (HRM)
📚 Definition and Importance
- Definition: HRM is the function of attracting, developing, and maintaining a sufficient number of skilled employees to perform activities that achieve organizational goals.
- Importance: It is crucial for both top managers and HR managers to ensure organizational success.
🌍 Environmental Influences on HRM
Organizations operate within an environment where many factors influence their human resources. Employees' needs, wants, and expectations change over time, and satisfying these is essential for high performance.
✅ Internal Environmental Factors
- Personal Factors: Employee needs, wants, expectations, common values, perception of roles, motivation, and abilities.
- Job Characteristics: Influence of different jobs, workload, job security, and working conditions.
- Interpersonal Relations: Leadership styles, formal and informal groups.
- Organizational Factors: Top management, organization size, industry characteristics, competitive strategy, mergers, and technology.
✅ External Environmental Factors
- Workforce Diversity: Demographic characteristics of the community's workforce (education, gender, age).
- External Sources of HR: The pool from which organizations recruit (vocational schools, universities, unions, HR agencies).
- Competitors: Competing for similar qualified workforce.
- Regulators: Government regulations on labor issues (minimum wage, health and safety laws).
📊 Functions of HRM
The core functions of HRM include:
- HR Planning
- HR Recruitment and Selection
- HR Training and Development
- HR Performance Appraisal
- HR Compensation
1️⃣ HR Planning
- Definition: Determining the right amount of people with the right qualifications at the right time and place to achieve company goals. It must be linked to the company's overall strategic mission.
- Determining the Right Number of People:
- Past experiences (trend analysis, ratio analysis)
- Evaluating workloads (production amount, customer numbers)
- Production technology utilized
- Practices of other companies.
- Determining the Right Qualification of People:
- Job Analysis: Detailed examination of all jobs to understand required skills, knowledge, physical activities, and abilities.
- Job Analysis Methods:
- Interview method (individual employees, groups, supervisors)
- Structured questionnaire method
- Observation method (noting physical activities)
- Diary method (workers log activities and time spent).
- Results of Job Analysis:
- 📚 Job Description: A written statement describing what the worker does, how, and under what working conditions (job identification, summary, responsibilities, authority, performance standards, working conditions, specifications).
- 📚 Job Specification: A list of a job's "human requirements" – qualifications, skills, and talents employees must possess.
- 📚 Job Evaluation: Determines the relative value of jobs within the organization, crucial for compensation management.
2️⃣ HR Recruitment and Selection
- Importance: Selecting the right employee is vital to prevent low productivity from unqualified personnel.
- Recruiting: The "candidate search and find" process to develop a candidate pool.
- Internal Sources: Promotions, transfers, employee recommendations.
- External Sources: Advertising (want-ads), vocational schools, universities, HR agencies.
- Selection: The process of choosing appropriate candidates.
- From Internal Sources: Career planning.
- From External Sources (Steps):
- Application form (records interest, provides profile, basic record for hired, research tool)
- Tests (Cognitive ability, personality, physical, achievement)
- Cognitive Ability Tests: Measure thinking, memory, reasoning, verbal/mathematical abilities.
- Physical Ability Tests: Measure strength, endurance, muscular movement.
- Psychomotor Tests: Measure dexterity, hand-eye coordination.
- Personality Tests: Measure friendliness, introversion, stability, motivation.
- Interviews (face-to-face, universal tool)
- Types by Structure: Structured (standardized questions), Unstructured (no specific questions).
- Types by Purpose: Predictive of future job performance (e.g., Stress Interviews).
- Types by Content: Situational interviews (how to respond to specific job situations).
- Medical examination
- Reference checks
- Employment decision
3️⃣ HR Orientation and Training
- 📚 Orientation: Procedure for providing new employees with basic information about the firm.
- 📚 Training: Providing specific knowledge and skills necessary to perform specific job activities and tasks.
- Non-Managerial Level Training Programs:
- On-the-Job: Apprenticeship training, job instruction by monitoring.
- Off-the-Job: Conference, classroom groups, programmed instruction, audiovisual techniques, lectures, simulation, computer-based training.
- Managerial Level Training Programs:
- On-the-Job: Coaching, understudy assignments, job rotation.
- Off-the-Job: Case study, management game method, role playing method.
- Non-Managerial Level Training Programs:
4️⃣ HR Performance Appraisal
- Definition: The process by which organizations evaluate employees' job performance.
- Purpose: To identify past performance and potential areas for improvement.
- Methods: Checklist, Critical Incident, Rating Scale, Essay, Forced Choice.
5️⃣ HR Compensation Management
- Importance: One of the most critical HRM functions.
- Components of Compensation:
- Direct Compensation: Wages, salaries, incentives.
- Indirect Compensation: Fringe benefits (voluntarily offered) and benefits as legal obligations (non-cash items like services).
- Job Evaluation: Systematic procedures to compare jobs and determine their relative worth, considering factors like skills, effort, problem-solving, responsibility, work conditions, work pressure, know-how, and creativity.
2. 💰 Accounting and Finance
💡 Importance of Financial Issues
Financial issues are paramount in business. Businesses need capital to achieve their goals, and a lack of capital can hinder target achievement. Decisions on how to raise money are called financing decisions.
📊 Money Management in Organizations
- Accounting Activities: Recording and analyzing monetary activities.
- Financing Activities: Fund (money) raising and investing decisions.
📚 Accounting Process
Accounting is an information system that provides necessary financial information such as investment costs, material costs, revenues, wages, marketing/sales costs, etc.
- Collect receipts, invoices, statements as proof of business activities.
- Record every business activity as debit and credit.
- Enter every transaction chronologically into its relevant account (Journal).
- Transfer every journal entry to the relevant account page in the ledger.
- Prepare summarized charts (Balance Sheet, Cash Flow, Income Statement) showing performance results.
- Analyze organizational performance based on financial statements.
📈 Financial Accounting
- Purpose: To provide financial information to external parties outside the organization (stockholders, creditors, labor unions, customers, suppliers, tax authorities, government institutions).
- Transactions: Deals handled in business, recorded with two equal entries (debit and credit).
- Journal: A book where transactions are recorded chronologically, including transaction number, date, debit/credit changes, and a short explanation.
- Ledger: A book where all separate accounts are recorded and kept, with journal entries transferred to individual account pages.
📜 Basic Financial Statements
- 📚 Balance Sheet: Shows the financial status of the organization at a specified date, summarizing assets and liabilities.
- 📚 Income Statement (Profit and Loss): Shows revenues, expenses, and net income over a period. Measures profitability.
- Revenues: Inflows that increase owner's interest.
- Expenses: Outflows that decrease owner's interest.
- Net Income (Profit): Revenues > Expenses.
- Loss: Expenses > Revenues.
- 📚 Cash Flow Statement: States cash receipts and payments during a period, reporting generated cash.
🧑💼 Managerial Accounting
- Purpose: Provides financial information to people inside an organization who manage its operations, enabling effective administration.
💰 Financial Management
- Definition: Planning, obtaining, and managing an organization's use of funds to achieve preset goals effectively.
- Financial Managers: Responsible for developing and implementing plans for obtaining money to supply assets.
- Key Decisions:
- Capital Budgeting Decisions: Which real assets the organization should acquire.
- Financing Decisions: How to raise the funds (money).
- Tasks: Managing capital budgeting and financing decisions.
- Working Capital: Focuses on current assets and current liabilities.
- Cash Forecasts: Prepared by financial managers to assess possible cash movements in the near future.
- Cash Budgets: Cash projections prepared on a rolling basis.
💲 Sources of Funds
Organizations need funds to purchase assets.
- 📚 Equity Capital: Funds raised from the organization's owners and shareholders. Not borrowed money, so not paid back.
- Venture Capital: Capital owners investing in new, young, untried businesses for profit.
- 📚 Debt Capital: Funds raised through borrowing from creditors. Borrowed funds that must be paid back with interest by a specified date.
- Short-Term Debts: Paid back in less than one year, used for current cash needs.
- Bank loans: Simplest, most common form.
- Factoring: Selling receivables to a financial institution at a discount.
- Long-Term Debts: Loans issued by financial institutions, often for large companies.
- Financial leasing: Long-term rental agreement for assets instead of buying.
- Short-Term Debts: Paid back in less than one year, used for current cash needs.
3. ⚙️ Operations Management
📚 Definition and Scope
- Definition: Operations are a transformation process, viewed as the technical core of an organization, where inputs (raw materials, capital, labor) are transformed into outputs.
- Forms of Operations:
- Physical: Manufacturing operations.
- Locational: Transportation or warehouse operations.
- Exchange: Retail operations.
- Informational: Communication operations.
🎯 Primary Topics in Operations Management
- Deploying operations strategy
- Assuring quality
- Designing products and services
- Choosing a location
- Planning the production process
- Laying out the facility
- Designing jobs and work
- Supply chain management
- Production planning and scheduling
📈 Process (Transformation) Strategies
- Definition: An organization's overall approach to physically producing goods and services.
- Key Concepts:
- Capital Intensity: Mix of capital and labor used in production.
- Vertical Integration: Extent to which firms produce inputs and control outputs.
- Customer Involvement: Role of the customer in the productive process.
🏭 Types of Processes
- Projects: One-of-a-kind production for individual customers, very high customer involvement (e.g., airplanes, ships, bridges, planning concerts).
- Batch Production: Goods produced in small groups or batches, moderate quantities made to customer order, involves fabrication rather than assembling (e.g., bakeries, furniture making).
- Mass Production: Creates more standardized products in larger quantities, high volumes due to stable demand, associated with flow lines or assembly lines (e.g., televisions, cars, computers).
- Continuous Production: Highly automated process for very high volume, standardized commodities, operates continuously (e.g., paper, paints, chemicals, steel).
🔗 Supply Chain Management (SCM)
- Definition: Integration of activities that receive materials, transform them into final products, and deliver them to customers through an effective distribution system.
- Activities: Purchasing, supplier relations, marketing intermediaries, credits, cash transfers, accounts receivable/payables, warehousing, inventories, information flow.
- Importance: Increases competitiveness through high quality and cost reductions. Key is to make suppliers "partners."
- Strategies:
- Negotiating with many suppliers: Low prices due to competition.
- Long-term partnering with few suppliers: Minimum conflicts, strong relationships.
- Vertical integration: Acquiring suppliers to produce previously purchased goods.
- Developing network/virtual supplying companies: Partnering through improved communication systems for specialized vendor services.
📦 Inventory Management
- Definition: A stock of items a company maintains to meet demands.
- Forms of Inventory: Finished goods, raw materials, purchased parts, in-process products, component parts, tools, machinery, equipment.
- Goal: Maintain adequate inventory to meet customer demands efficiently.
- Costs:
- Inventory carrying costs
- Inventory ordering costs
- Inventory shortage costs
⏱️ Just-In-Time (JIT) System
- Definition: Purchase, production, or both, of small quantities of products just in time for use.
- Benefits: Smaller inventories, reduced storage space, less equipment (forklifts), lower material handling costs.
- Principle: Eliminates waste by providing the right parts at the right place, at the right time, leading to less inventory, lower costs, and better quality.
- Trend: Suppliers and buyers collaborate to remove waste and drive down costs.
4. 📈 Marketing Management
📚 Definition and Importance
- Definition: Dynamic function that defines customer needs and directs organizational resources to meet them. It covers all activities involved in foreseeing, predicting, managing, and satisfying customer demand through exchange.
- Activities: Environmental analysis, marketing research, buyer analysis, product planning, distribution planning, promotion planning, price planning.
- Alternative Definition: "The process of planning and executing the conception, pricing, promotion, and distribution of ideas, goods, and services to create exchanges that satisfy individual and organizational objectives."
💡 Marketing vs. Selling Concept
- Selling Concept: Starts with existing product, uses promotional efforts for profitable sales.
- Marketing Concept: Starts with a defined market, focuses on customer needs/wants, coordinates all marketing activities (product creation, distribution, promotion) to obtain profits.
🔍 Marketing Research
- Definition: Collecting and using information for making marketing decisions.
- Purpose: Defines marketing problems/opportunities, systematically collects/analyzes information, recommends actions to improve marketing activities, reduces risks and uncertainty.
- Types of Research Design:
- Exploratory Research: Investigating the main purpose.
- Causal Research: Investigating relationships, cause and effect.
- Descriptive Research: Identifying customer or product profiles.
- Scope: Very broad, from idea generation to post-launch, identifying target markets, analyzing conditions, evaluating distribution/promotion methods.
🛒 Markets and Buyers
- 📚 Market: A place where people or organizations with sufficient purchasing power, authority, and willingness to buy and sell meet.
- Market Types:
- Seller's Market: Many buyers, few products.
- Buyer's Market: Few buyers, many products.
- Segmented Market: Customers with similar characteristics.
- Mass Market: Customers with different characteristics.
- Consumer Markets: Individuals and households buying for personal consumption.
- Business Markets: Organizations buying for manufacturing, resale, renting, or consumption.
- Target Market/Market Segment: A specific market of potential customers sharing similar characteristics and product needs.
🛍️ Consumer Markets
- Definition: Made up of all individuals and households who purchase goods and services for personal consumption.
- Consumer Market Segmentation: Based on characteristics of individuals, groups, or organizations to identify different response patterns to marketing mixes.
- Geographic Segmentation: Country, region.
- Demographic Segmentation: Age, gender, income.
- Psychographic Segmentation: Personality, motive, lifestyle.
- Geo-demographic Segmentation: Combination of geographic, demographic, and psychographic.
- Usage Rate Segmentation: Non-user, former user, potential user.
- Benefit Segmentation: Health, nutrition, good taste, economical, weight loss.
🧠 Consumer Behavior
- Definition: Actions an individual takes in purchasing and using products and services.
- Factors Affecting Consumer Behavior:
- Psychological Factors: Motivation, personality, perception, learning, values, beliefs, attitudes, lifestyle.
- Socio-Cultural Factors: Word-of-mouth, opinion leaders, family influences, social class, cultures, sub-cultures.
🏢 Business Markets
- Definition: Markets for products and services purchased by all types of organizations for use in manufacturing, resale, renting to others for profit, or consumption. Involved in all non-retail and non-consumer goods sales.
🎯 Marketing Mix (4 Ps or P3D)
The four key elements of the marketing mix are Product, Pricing, Promotion, and Distribution (Place).
1️⃣ Products and Services
- 📚 Products: Tangible objects with physical properties.
- 📚 Services: A form of product consisting of activities, benefits offered for sale that are essentially intangible; cannot be stored or processed.
- Classification by Tangibility:
- Durable Product: Used over time (e.g., household appliances, cars).
- Non-durable Product: Consumed in one or a few uses (e.g., detergents, foodstuff, gasoline).
- Classification by User Type:
- Consumer Products: Purchased by the final end-user for personal consumption.
- Convenience Products: Bought frequently, immediately, with minimal effort (e.g., toothpaste, newspapers).
- Shopping Products: Customers spend more time and effort on selection, comparing prices, quality, style (e.g., furniture, clothing).
- Specialty Products: Unique characteristics, consumers make special efforts to search and purchase (e.g., luxury cars, Rolex watches).
- Industrial Products: Sales result from derived demand from consumer goods sales (e.g., raw materials, equipment for car manufacturing).
- Production Products
- Support Products
- Consumer Products: Purchased by the final end-user for personal consumption.
2️⃣ Product Life Cycle
- Concept: Products are "born" and "die," passing through stages as they age.
- Stages of New Product Development:
- Idea Generation
- Screening
- Product Development (Prototypes)
- Product Market Testing
- Business Analysis (Financial consequences)
- Commercialization
- 📚 Product Lines: Group of closely related product items a company offers.
- 📚 Product Mix: Includes all different product lines a company offers.
3️⃣ Branding
- 📚 Brand: Name, sign, symbol, etc., that identifies a product.
- 📚 Brand Equity: Refers to the value of a brand.
- 📚 Brand Loyalty: Consumers preferring a particular brand (recognition, preference, insistence).
- 📚 Trademarks: Brands under legal protection.
- Types of Brands: Manufacturer's brand, Private brand (wholesaler/retailer), Generic products (unbranded).
- 📚 Package: Holds contents and protects products.
- 📚 Labeling: Promotional or informational logo/theme (Persuasive, Informational).
- Service Processing:
- People Processing: Service directed at the customer.
- Possession Processing: Service directed at something the customer owns.
- Information Processing: Service involving brainpower or technology (e.g., accounting, financial, legal services).
4️⃣ Distribution (Place)
- Definition: Decisions on how to effectively and efficiently deliver products to end-users.
- 📚 Marketing Channels (Distribution Channels): Channel structures between product origin and end-user.
- Types of Channels:
- Direct Marketing Channel: Mail orders, internet sales, door-to-door selling. Indirect Marketing Channel: Wholesalers, retailers, agents, brokers (e.g., real estate brokers).
- 📚 Retailers: Organizations selling products directly to end-users for personal use.
- 📚 Wholesalers: Organizations selling products to other wholesalers and retailers for resale.
5️⃣ Promotion
- Definition: Developing programs to inform about products/organization and motivate potential customers to purchase. Also called marketing communications.
- Objectives: Providing information, increasing demand, differentiating product/service, enhancing product value, stabilizing sales.
- Promotional Strategies:
- Pulling Strategy: Communication directed to end-users.
- Pushing Strategy: Communication directed to intermediaries.
6️⃣ Pricing
- Definition: The exchange value of a product or service, critical for success or failure. Prices should be consistent with quality and valued by customers.
- Factors Affecting Prices:
- Internal Factors: Marketing objectives and strategy, cost of raw materials, organizational considerations.
- External Factors: Market demand, competitor's price, economic conditions, government regulations.
- Pricing Strategies (New Product/New Market):
- Market-Skimming Pricing: Setting a high initial price.
- Market-Penetration Pricing: Setting a low initial price.
- Parity Pricing (Competitive Pricing): Matching competitor prices.
5. ⚖️ Social Responsibility, Ethics, and Law
🤝 Social Responsibilities of Business
- Impact: Businesses affect communities' welfare through their conduct.
- Goals: High productivity and improving stakeholder welfare. Business failure can harm stakeholders.
- Definition: Management's consideration of the social and economic effects of its decisions.
- Managerial Role: Socially responsible managers should think about overall effects of decisions on mutual issues.
- Nature: Assumed to be self-control rather than external enforcement; voluntary and involves managers' discretion.
👥 Responsibility to Stakeholders
Organizations have responsibilities to various stakeholders and the natural environment.
- 📚 Stakeholders: Any individuals or groups with interests in the organization's performance.
- Primary Stakeholders:
- Shareholders and Investors: Concerned about company performance and outcomes; management is responsible for achieving objectives with minimal resources.
- Employees: Management is responsible for fair treatment and compensation.
- Consumers: Demand knowledge about quality, safety, prices; consumer information/complaint departments, product safety.
- Creditors: Provide financial funding; management is responsible to the financial community.
- Government: Principal taxpayer; responsible for conformity with regulations.
- Public: Concerned with hiring handicapped/ex-convicts, fair employment, public health, corporate philanthropy.
- Natural Environment: Businesses use natural resources (some non-renewable); responsible for sustainability and pollution (e.g., recycling).
🔄 Responses of Business Toward Social Demands
- Social Obligation Stage: Reacting to social issues through obedience to laws; driven by fear of sanctions.
- Social Responsibility Stage: More active responses, accepting responsibilities voluntarily, even without obligation.
- Social Responsiveness Stage: Highly proactive, pioneering in public affairs, seeking positive public assessments for a respectable image.
🛡️ Corporate Response Strategies
- Reaction Strategies: Obstructive, denying responsibility, defending against accusations (e.g., information disclosure, expert counseling).
- Defense Strategies: Admitting some faults, taking no obstructive actions, aiming to resolve conflict with minimal loss.
- Accommodation Strategies: Admitting responsibility, usually under public pressure, meeting economic/legal penalties.
- Proactive Strategies: Taking the lead in social actions, identifying public wants, taking steps without pressure.
📝 Social Audits
- Purpose: To demonstrate accountability of social responsibility, inform stakeholders by reviewing, reporting, and evaluating social responsibility activities.
- Focus: Environment, employment, corporate social giving (philanthropy).
💡 Business Ethics
- Definition: Standards of right or wrong within society; discipline dealing with good/bad and moral duty/obligation.
- Business Ethics: Concerned with what is right/wrong, truth, and justice in business. Covers societal expectations, fair competition, advertising, PR, social responsibilities, consumer autonomy, corporate behavior.
- Ethical Behavior in Business: Application of this understanding to business life.
- Approaches to Ethical Decision-Making:
- Utilitarian Approach: Plans/actions evaluated by consequences; greatest good for the greatest number.
- Individual Rights Approach: All people have basic rights that cannot be limited; ethical decision maintains these rights.
- Justice Approach: Decision-makers guided by standards of fairness, equity, and impartiality.
🧑🏫 Managing Ethics in Organizations
Managers should create an ethical organizational environment.
- Methods:
- Establishing a company policy or a code of ethics.
- Establishing an ethics committee.
- Teaching ethics in development programs.
- 📚 Code of Ethics: Statement of policies, principles, or rules guiding business people's behavior.
- Suggestions to Prevent Unethical Actions:
- Provide clear guidelines for ethical behavior.
- Teach ethical guidelines and their importance.
- Refrain from actions in ethically unclear situations.
- Set up controls for illegal/unethical contracts and tasks.
- Conduct frequent, unpredictable audits.
- Punish unethical actions meaningfully and publicly.
- Emphasize that company loyalty does not excuse improper behavior.
⚖️ Factors Affecting Ethics and Ethical Standards
Ethical standards can differ across countries.
- The Manager: Personality traits, personal needs, family influence, religious backgrounds shape value systems. Self-confidence, Machiavellianism, locus of control affect ethical behavior.
- Organizational Climate: Influences employee behavior and decision-making. Mature cultures help employees understand unacceptable beliefs/behaviors.
📜 Law and Business
- Purpose of Law: To impose order on human society through sanctions against violating behavior.
- Supremacy of Law (Rule of Law): Decisions made by applying known principles without discretionary intervention.
- Business Relevance: Business people must consider laws in decisions and applications, especially business-related laws. Consultation with expert attorneys is advised.
🏛️ Branches of Law
- Private Law: Legal rules applied among individuals (e.g., civil law).
- Public Law: Laws concerned with state organization, state-individual relations, and inter-state relations.
- Constitutional Law: Government organization, powers, structure, fundamental principles regulating government-citizen relations.
- Administrative Law: Regulating state mechanism relations, conflicts between state and individuals, public services.
- Criminal Law: Defines criminal offenses, corresponding fines, and punishments.
- Judiciary (Court System) Law: Regulates court procedures (constitutional, administrative, military, judicial - criminal/civil).
- General State Law: State in its p…








