Imagine your favorite toy store is like a business, and everything around it, like weather, other stores, and even how people feel, is its external environment.
Like a Playground for Businesses
Think of the external business environment as the playground where a business plays. Just like you need to know if it's sunny or rainy before going out to play, a business needs to know what’s happening around it.
If there are lots of other toy stores nearby, that’s like having many friends on the playground, it can be fun but also competitive. If the weather is bad, fewer kids might come to the store, just like how fewer customers might visit if it rains a lot.
What's Around the Playground?
Sometimes, big things happen in the neighborhood, like a new school opening or a road getting closed. These are like changes that affect the whole playground. Businesses watch these changes because they help them decide what to do next, just like how you might change your game if a friend joins or leaves.
So, the external business environment is everything outside the business that can make it easier or harder to play, and sometimes even change the rules of the game!
Examples
- A local bakery struggles when a new chain opens nearby.
- A student starts a small business after seeing others succeed.
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See also
- What is Asymmetric information?
- What factors influence the dynamics of a real estate market?
- What is Price pressure?
- Why Do Prices Change So Much When We're All Just Trying to Buy Stuff?
- What are business environments?