← Back to Business

GCSE Business 02 — People in Business

Public

People in business: recruitment, training, motivation, leadership styles, organisational structure, and employment law.

Business EN
340 cards
Study this deck on Deckloop

Preview Cards

A sample of cards from this deck.

Example explainer

A sample of the AI explainer you can generate for cards in this deck.

Goods, services, consumer/producer markets and sectors

Business activity involves producing goods and services to meet customer needs and wants. Being able to classify products and sectors helps you interpret case studies and spot how value is created along supply chains.

Key points

  • Consumer goods are bought for personal use; producer goods are used by firms to produce other goods/services.
  • Services are intangible (e.g., haircuts), goods are tangible items.
  • Primary extracts raw materials; secondary manufactures; tertiary provides services; quaternary provides information/knowledge services.
  • Many businesses operate across multiple stages of a supply chain.
  • The type of product affects marketing, operations and pricing decisions.

Worked example

Question

A firm sells laptops to households and also sells servers to other firms. Explain the difference between these two sales and one implication for the firm’s marketing.

Solution

Laptops sold to households are consumer goods, while servers sold to other firms are producer goods.

Implication: The firm may need different marketing approaches—consumer marketing often focuses on brand and lifestyle benefits, while B2B marketing may focus on reliability, technical specs, after-sales support and long-term contracts.

Common pitfalls

  • Mixing up producer goods with raw materials (producer goods can be machinery/services).
  • Placing retail in the secondary sector (it’s tertiary).

Prerequisites

  • needs and wants
  • simple classification of businesses
Further resources