1.3.19

Small Businesses

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Small Businesses

Sometimes business owners choose to keep a business small. However, sometimes, businesses are unable to expand.

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Size of market

  • Sometimes the size of a company's market is not large enough for a firm to grow anymore. If a company sells Chilli-flavoured ice cream, there may not be enough demand outside of very niche ice cream shops. This can limit growth because the firm is in a 'niche market'.
  • Research by CB Insights found that 42% of startups failed because the market didn't need their product and 9% failed because of a failed geographic expansion.
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Access to capital

  • If a business cannot access capital, then it is unable to spend anything other than profits to grow. When companies are small, often they don't make huge profits because they have to cover both their fixed and variable costs, but don't have many customers to spread their fixed costs over.
  • After the 2008 financial crisis, many businesses reported that banks would not lend to them.
  • CB Insights research finds that 29% of failed startups failed because they ran out of cash.
  • If a company cannot issue equity or borrow from banks, then it has bad access to capital.
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Owner objectives

  • Some business owners or founders may decide that they don't want to grow.
  • Growing and hiring more employees increases the amount of legal, accounting and bureaucratic burden for a firm.
  • Owners may be risk-averse and just want to run a 'lifestyle business' that can fund their own desired income.
  • For example, a software developer setting up a company to sell his services may not want to hire other developers and grow, preferring to focus on funding his own income.
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Types of firms

  • Not for profit firms may only hope to improve one social issue in one area - e.g. homelessness in Leeds. They may have no incentive to grow, even if they could.
  • Firms or departments in the public sector may have no incentive to grow. The UK Department for Education has no funds allocated and no desire to expand internationally.

Jump to other topics

1Understanding Business Activity

1.1Business Activity

1.2Classification of Businesses

1.3Enterprise, Business Growth & Size

1.4Types of Business Organisation

1.5Business Objectives & Stakeholder Objectives

2People in Business

3Marketing

3.1Marketing & the Market

3.2Market Research

3.3Marketing Mix

3.4Legal Controls

4Operations Management

5Financial Information & Decisions

6External Influences on Business Activity

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