Categories: All - capital - management - materials - resources

by Rubab Choudhary 5 years ago

411

#1-Rubab C, Afifa F, Fatima I- What is Production?

The process of creating products involves transforming raw materials into final goods through a structured system known as production. Key elements essential to production include management, which oversees and makes strategic decisions; labour, which encompasses all physical and mental work required; capital, referring to both liquid assets like cash and non-liquid assets such as intellectual property and capital goods; and natural resources, which are categorized into primary industries like energy, forestry, and agriculture.

#1-Rubab C, Afifa F, Fatima I- What is Production?

The action of making a product by using raw materials

What is Production

Production

Factors of Production

There are 6 types of factors of production
Capital

The money invested in a business

Non-liquid

Capital goods (buildings etc.)

Intellectual Property - rights that allow one to make an income off an invetion

Liquid

cash, stocks, bonds, accounts receivable

Labour

All the physical and mental work needed to produce goods

Consolidated

small divisions closed down and focused on one area

Automated

work done by machines

Outsource

Hire other companies to preform tasks

Management

People who control the factors of production

Decide what to purchase, what to make, whom to hire, where to sell, etc.

Higher level managers decide how profits are used

Information

Required to produce goods and services in an economy

Information itself has become a product for sale. A business can provide interesting data for free over the internet, and charge companies to advertise it.

Raw Material

The use of goods to make another good

Ingredients

Raw materials that go into a product

Supplies

Raw materials that do not become part of the product. However, they are used in the running of the business

Natural Resources

There are 6 types of natural resources, known as the primary industries which include energy, forestry, agriculture, fishing, water and mining