SB Exam 2
Heuristic
A commonsense rule; a rule of thumb
Pioneering Business
A firm whose product or service is new to the industry or is itself creating a new industry.
Variance
(1) The difference between an actual and budgeted revenue or cost (2) Permission from a government organization to act differently than the laws state.
Volatility
The frequency of business starts and stops
Permanence
The impression of long-term continuity a business gives others.
Covenant
The limitations imposed on an individual's property by the neighborhood group.
Affordable Loss
The minimum possible expenditure of capital and other resources in order to bring an entrepreneurial idea to market.
Magic Number
The posttax income the entrepreneur personally seeks from the business.
Due Diligence
The process of investigating a business to determine its value and potential for investment.
Replacement Value
the cost to acquire an essentially identical asset
Screening Plan
Also called a mini-plan, gives the basic overview of the firm and a detailed look at the financials.
Network Marketing
An approach to selling in which the salesperson recruits customers to become distributors of the product or service to others.
Parallel Competition
An imitative business that competes locally with others in the same industry.
Entry Wegde
An opportunity that makes it possible for a new business to gain a foothold in a market.
Incremental innovation
An overall strategic approach in which a firm patterns itself on other firms, with the exception of one or two key areas.
Intangibles
Assets, such as patents or trademarks, and liabilities, such as accounts payable, that have no physical existence.
Aggrandizing
Attempting to make your business or yourself seem more accomplished or grander
Industry Dynamics
Changes in competitors, sales, and profits in an industry over time.
Preselling
Involves introducing your future product to potential customers and taking orders for later delivery.
Net Realizable Value
The amount for which an asset will sell, less the costs of selling.
external legitimacy
The extent to which a small business is taken for granted, accepted, or treated as viable by organizations or people outside the small business or the owner's family.
Multichannel Marketing
The use of several different channels to reach your customers; for example, a website, direct mail, and traditional retailing.
Scope
A characteristic of a market that defines the geographic range covered by the market—from local to global.
Internal understanding
The extent to which employees, investors, and family members involved in the business know the business's purposes and operations.
Earnings Multiple
The ratio of the value of a firm to its annual earnings
Caveat Emptor
A Latin expression that means "let the buyer beware," which has been made into a philosophy sometimes used by businesses to put the burden for consumer protection onto the customer.
Scale
A characteristic of a market that describes the size of the market—a mass market or a niche market.
Synergy
A combination in which the whole is greater than the sum of its component parts.
Niche Market
A narrowly defined segment of the population that is likely to share interests or concerns.
Proprietary Technology
A product or service or an aspect of one that is kept as a trade secret or is protected legally using patent, copyright, trademark, or service mark.