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Business

Entrepreneurship, marketing, finance and strategy for GCSE & A-Level.

1. Pick your year group

Starting and running a business.

2. Pick a topic from Year 10

Year 10 Β· Business

Enterprise & entrepreneurship

Why people start businesses and what skills they need.

Key things to remember

  • Motives: profit, independence, social.
  • Risks: financial, time, reputation.
  • Entrepreneurs spot gaps in the market.

Worked example

Give two motives for starting a business.

Approach: Money, freedom.

Answer: Profit, independence, passion, or filling a market gap (any two).

How to study this

  • 1.Read the key points above out loud β€” say them in your own words.
  • 2.Cover the page and re-write the key points from memory.
  • 3.Attempt today's questions before peeking at hints.
  • 4.Come back tomorrow β€” spaced repetition locks it in.

Memory hooks

  • AMotives: profit, independence, social.
  • BRisks: financial, time, reputation.
  • CEntrepreneurs spot gaps in the market.

Tip: turn each letter into a single word and chain them into a silly sentence β€” your brain remembers weird stories.

Deep dive

Everything you need to know about Enterprise & entrepreneurship

Why people start businesses and what skills they need. This sits inside the Year 10 Business curriculum and builds the foundation for the topics that follow β€” so getting really confident here pays off across the whole course.

Why it matters

Enterprise & entrepreneurship shows up in homework, class quizzes and end-of-year exams. Mastering it now means fewer silly mistakes later and a much easier time when harder topics build on it.

Where you'll see it

Expect questions in Business lessons, end-of-unit tests, and revision booklets. It also links to real-world situations, so examiners love wrapping it inside word problems.

Key vocabulary & ideas

  • Idea 1

    Motives: profit, independence, social.

    Say this out loud in your own words, then write one example that proves it.

  • Idea 2

    Risks: financial, time, reputation.

    Say this out loud in your own words, then write one example that proves it.

  • Idea 3

    Entrepreneurs spot gaps in the market.

    Say this out loud in your own words, then write one example that proves it.

Common mistakes to avoid

  • Rushing the question. Read it twice β€” underline what's actually being asked before you start writing.
  • Skipping working out. Show every step. You get method marks even when the final answer is wrong.
  • Forgetting key vocabulary. Use the proper terms from the key points above β€” examiners reward precise language.
  • Not checking your answer. Estimate first, then sense-check β€” does the answer feel about right?

Exam & assessment tips

Read the command word

"Describe", "explain", "evaluate" and "calculate" all want different things β€” match your answer to the verb.

Watch the marks

1 mark = one point. 4 marks = four distinct points or steps. Don't over- or under-write.

Use specialist terms

Drop in vocabulary from this topic β€” that's how examiners see you actually understand it.

Leave time to check

Spend the last 5 minutes re-reading answers. Most lost marks are silly slips, not knowledge gaps.

Am I ready? Self-check

  • I can explain Enterprise & entrepreneurship in my own words without looking at notes.
  • I can list every key point above from memory.
  • I got at least 7/10 on today's practice questions without peeking.
  • I can teach this to someone else for 60 seconds straight.
  • I've spotted where this topic links to other things I've learned.

Stretch yourself

Already confident? Push further with these challenges β€” perfect for top-grade revision.

  • Generate +6 fresh AI questions below and aim for 100% first try.
  • Write your own exam question on Enterprise & entrepreneurship β€” then mark a friend's answer.
  • Make a one-page mind-map linking every key point above.
  • Ask Spark to give you the hardest possible question on this topic.

Downloads

Printable study sheets

Unlock downloadable cheat sheets, help sheets and worksheets for every topic β€” Β£2.99/month.

Unlock for Β£2.99/mo

Today's practice

1 questions. Generate unlimited brand-new ones β€” never repeats.

  1. 1

    Give two motives for starting a business.

Need it explained your way?

Spark can re-teach this topic in plain English, give you more questions, or help with a tricky part.

Ask Spark about Enterprise & entrepreneurship