1 / 13

Big Business

Big Business. Corporations. Corporations are essentially a big business Owned by many people but treated as one person Stockholders Stock: shares of ownership. Economies of Scale. Money a business made from selling stock was used to pay for a workforce and technology to increase efficiency

neorah
Download Presentation

Big Business

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Big Business

  2. Corporations • Corporationsare essentially a big business • Owned by many people but treated as one person • Stockholders • Stock: shares of ownership

  3. Economies of Scale • Money a business made from selling stock was used to pay for a workforce and technology to increase efficiency • Economies of Scale • This made it possible for a business to stay open, even during bad economic times • Forcing many small business, that couldn’t, to close; • leaving only big businesses

  4. Pools • Pools • Some entrepreneurs cheated by temporarily going under the agreed price • This drew business away from competitors • Also contributed to the closing of several small businesses • Once all the competitors were gone, the owners could raise prices well above production costs • This is how monopolieswere made

  5. Vertical Integration • instead of paying companies for necessary material, a corporation would simply buy out the suppliers • Controlling everything • Saves money and promotes business growth

  6. Horizontal Integration • Occurs when many firms, engaged in the same type of business, merge together • Vertical and horizontal integration are shortcuts to creating big businesses

  7. Famous Robber Barons and Their Monopolies • Robber Baron • a term used to reference a businessman who gained his wealth through questionable practices

  8. Famous Robber Barons and Their Monopolies • John D. Rockefeller • Owned the Standard Oil Company • He created a monopoly in the oil industry by ensuring that his company was the only supplier of oil from the drilling to the refining

  9. Famous Robber Barons and Their Monopolies • Andrew Carnegie • Owned a steel company that controlled the iron and coal mines • Also owned railroads and steam ships • In this way, he controlled the production of steel and forced out competition

  10. Famous Robber Barons and Their Monopolies • Cornelius Vanderbilt • He and his son owned the New York Central Railroad • Only railroad, at the time, linking NY and Chicago

  11. Holding Companies • A company that does not produce any of its necessary materials itself. • Instead it owns stock in the companies that do produce

  12. Advertising • Large display ads in newspapers, department stores, and catalogs became pivotal to the success of a business. • The biggest businesses could afford more ads (more expensive ones too) • Therefore their sales greatly increased

More Related