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Business Organizations. TYPES OF BUSINESS ORGANIZATIONS 1. PROPRIETORSHIP- one owner (most common/...

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Page 1: Business Organizations. TYPES OF BUSINESS ORGANIZATIONS 1. PROPRIETORSHIP- one owner (most common/ easiest to enter) 2. PARTNERSHIP- two or more owners.

Business Organizations

Page 2: Business Organizations. TYPES OF BUSINESS ORGANIZATIONS 1. PROPRIETORSHIP- one owner (most common/ easiest to enter) 2. PARTNERSHIP- two or more owners.

TYPES OF BUSINESS ORGANIZATIONS

1. PROPRIETORSHIP- one owner(most common/ easiest to enter)

2. PARTNERSHIP- two or more owners

(least common/ professionals)

3. CORPORATION- stockholders(makes most $/ toughest to

enter (charter)

Page 3: Business Organizations. TYPES OF BUSINESS ORGANIZATIONS 1. PROPRIETORSHIP- one owner (most common/ easiest to enter) 2. PARTNERSHIP- two or more owners.

Sole Proprietorship

• Easy to Start• Unlimited Liability• Exclusive Profit• Sole Responsibility• Needs Collateral- Limited Growth Potential• Full Control• Lacks Longevity

Page 4: Business Organizations. TYPES OF BUSINESS ORGANIZATIONS 1. PROPRIETORSHIP- one owner (most common/ easiest to enter) 2. PARTNERSHIP- two or more owners.

Partnership• Easy to Start

• Can Specialize

• Shared Decision-

• making

• Shared Losses

• Unlimited Liability

• Potential for Conflict

• Lacks Longevity

Page 5: Business Organizations. TYPES OF BUSINESS ORGANIZATIONS 1. PROPRIETORSHIP- one owner (most common/ easiest to enter) 2. PARTNERSHIP- two or more owners.

CorporationEasy to raise Capital- but tough guidelines to sell stockDifficult to FormLimited LiabilityTaxed TwiceProfits are DividedLast longer than its founders.Owners are separate from managers.

Page 6: Business Organizations. TYPES OF BUSINESS ORGANIZATIONS 1. PROPRIETORSHIP- one owner (most common/ easiest to enter) 2. PARTNERSHIP- two or more owners.
Page 7: Business Organizations. TYPES OF BUSINESS ORGANIZATIONS 1. PROPRIETORSHIP- one owner (most common/ easiest to enter) 2. PARTNERSHIP- two or more owners.

Sweet Opportunities Instructions

• Make a recommendation about what form of business organization you think is best for each client.

• State the reasons for your position. There will also be some disadvantages to the business form you choose.

• Identify at least one negative and suggest how you might minimize it.

Page 8: Business Organizations. TYPES OF BUSINESS ORGANIZATIONS 1. PROPRIETORSHIP- one owner (most common/ easiest to enter) 2. PARTNERSHIP- two or more owners.

SWEET OPPORTUNITIESGROUP WORK ANSWER KEY

Page 9: Business Organizations. TYPES OF BUSINESS ORGANIZATIONS 1. PROPRIETORSHIP- one owner (most common/ easiest to enter) 2. PARTNERSHIP- two or more owners.

Client #1• Client 1: Elise MacMillan and her brother Evan

co-founded The Chocolate Farm in Englewood, Colorado, in the late 1990s.

• They formed a partnership and won so many awards they eventually had to shut down part of their website because they couldn’t fill the orders. They hired about 10 people to work for them.

Page 10: Business Organizations. TYPES OF BUSINESS ORGANIZATIONS 1. PROPRIETORSHIP- one owner (most common/ easiest to enter) 2. PARTNERSHIP- two or more owners.

Client # 2• Client 2: Milton Hershey broke ground for his

chocolate factory near Lancaster, PA in 1903. It was the beginning of what would become Hershey Foods Corporation .

Page 11: Business Organizations. TYPES OF BUSINESS ORGANIZATIONS 1. PROPRIETORSHIP- one owner (most common/ easiest to enter) 2. PARTNERSHIP- two or more owners.

Client # 3• Client 3: Forest Mars invited Bruce Murrie, an

investment banker and son of the Hershey company president, to be his partner in M&M Ltd. The M&Ms we still eat today were first sold to the public in 1941. The letters in "M&M" stand for Mars & Murrie. Eventually, Murrie left the business but Forest Mars became the owner of Mars, Inc.

Page 12: Business Organizations. TYPES OF BUSINESS ORGANIZATIONS 1. PROPRIETORSHIP- one owner (most common/ easiest to enter) 2. PARTNERSHIP- two or more owners.

Client # 4

• Client 4: Wally Amos launched the Famous Amos Cookie Company in a Hollywood, CA storefront on Sunset Boulevard in 1975.

Page 13: Business Organizations. TYPES OF BUSINESS ORGANIZATIONS 1. PROPRIETORSHIP- one owner (most common/ easiest to enter) 2. PARTNERSHIP- two or more owners.

Diversification• Both Hershey Foods and Mars have purchased

manufacturers of other chocolate candy bar brands and non-chocolate candies. Hershey used to sell cocoa mulch, a byproduct of the chocolate making process, to gardeners, but no longer does. Mars has a history in the pet food business. Other Mars ventures include hot and cold drink vending machines.

• Famous Amos Cookies changed hands several times between 1985 and 1998, eventually being purchased by Keebler Foods. Keebler was acquired by Kellogg Company in 2001, helping expand what is viewed as a cereal company into the snack foods market as well.

Page 14: Business Organizations. TYPES OF BUSINESS ORGANIZATIONS 1. PROPRIETORSHIP- one owner (most common/ easiest to enter) 2. PARTNERSHIP- two or more owners.

Summarizer

sole proprietorship

corporation partnership


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