
At this juncture, you will have decided that you possess the skills necessary to be a great business manager. You may have read how you can lead large groups of employees. You may have found out that you will need to be great at getting people under you to do what needs to be done.If you have heard all of this and the job fits your personality, then you should be doing research on how you can be a business manager. When you are making plans for the career change, you will want to make sure that you know a lot about the field you are considering.
Some jobs look good but once you find out what they entail you will find they are not right for you. This is usually true in those coveted high paying careers. People usually get hung up on the prospect of making more money and they forget that they need to choose a career that is fun and interesting. If you dont want to make this mistake you will want to get a hold of at least one educational essay on your chosen careers in business management.
When looking for those essays that describe you career of business management, try to make sure it isnt by companies looking to hire new people because they tend to spin it towards thier business.Consider that if it sounds far too good, then throw the essay in the trash. Dont waste your time on pipe dreams, when what you need is the facts.
There may be a few great websites that will help you find information about working in those careers. You will want to try an essay about business management because the information will be unbiased.
Reading essays on careers on business management that has someone who may be bitter abut thier current position or even thier last one is just as bad as reading the one that is too much like an advertisement. If you look at the essay and it is unbiased you will know exactly what may happen in that kind of job.
Yes, you may see all the bad thing that could happen from the bitter person, but that only applies to the place he worked, making this essay totally useless.
Watch the video related to business management
Visit BusinessEnglishPod.com to view and download more videos on Business English vocabulary for ESL. This Business English video ESL lesson introduces English vocabulary for discussing projects and project management in English.
Help answer the question about business management
What is a business management degree? Can you explain that to me?I'm planning to start a home based business soon, and I recently looked into going to a local community college for the two-year business management degree futher on. So please, if you don't mind, explain the purpose of it. If I already have a home business running later, is it necessary for me to have that degree? I'll be waiting for your answers! Thanks!




Honestly, Its everything. So I choose
e. All the above
Although it is predominantly done by the owners or senior management of a business, business management comprises of all the points u had mentioned.
Government or private should not matter. Understand the purpose of this organization and its customer. Understand what this customer needs and considers of value. Help workers understand this and have them do more of what is valuable and less of what is waste.
If you love apples… scream Aye!
I am currently doing this type of degree, though I heard salary isn’t much.
I enjoyed this alot!!!! I just got my bachelors but there is still lots I need to learn
Aye!
All business associate degree will give you a foundation in business management including accounting, marketing, sales economics etc…
When you pick a focus like marketing, human resources etc… you will then take 3-5 courses that go deeper into that concentration.
A business management concentration will go deeper into managing people (HR), processes (IT, operations), money (finance/accounting) ..All the knowledge one would need to Supervise and manage a business as a whole.
A marketing management concentrartion will go deeper into educating tthe public about a company's products and persuading them to buy those products. You will learn more about sales, advertising, public relations, consumer behavior and media.
I have a Business Management degree and have worked at a non-profit. My choices were not as broad as yours, but here is what I did. I choose general management. Choices were supply chain, general, finance and one other that I can't remember. I went back later on and got a second degree in marketing. Marketing really helped me because all business basics are covered but marketing is always necessary in whatever you do. You have to be able to keep your client happy, you have to be able to attract them into doing business with you. My second degree has actually been favorably looked upon. Maybe you can try something like that.
As to whether it is necessary to have the degree, the answer is no. The only time it is truly necessary to have a degree is when you wish to be hired by an existing company that requires a degree, or when you wish to be credentialed for for some practice that requires a degree, such as medicine or engineering.
The things you should get from the degree include business computing skills, business communication, a bit of human resources, possibly a good internship, and maybe some other things like marketing and job seeking skills. I would get ahold of their catalog and read the course description for every course in the curriculum. If the descriptions sound like things that could be useful to you then you might give it a shot.
Alternatively, you might just take only the classes you're most interested in. It's likely that the community college offers a one year certificate with many of the same courses, so you might think of doing that instead.
I will offer one caveat – what if your plan doesn't work out and you decide you'd be better off with a bachelors or masters degree, like an MBA or MBF? The problem with the degree you're considering is that it is probably not a good choice should you decide to try to transfer. If you think you may eventually be interested in a four year degree or beyond, you might look into your community college's general studies curriculum. Also, check out to see whether this college has a career center. Those folks should be able to help you out. If not, speak to an advisor from the business program.
Good luck!
In terms of business administration, there isn't really that much of a difference. A hotel is a company selling a product. Big chain hotels function as multinational companies just like any other.
Hotels as companies follow the same business laws but have some specific industry laws (reimbursement, accounting, VAT breakdown, insurance, etc.) However, every sector has its specific laws.
The main difference is that a hotel sells services to clients that come into the hotel to consume the product (roomnight, seminar, dinner, etc). A "non service" company will sell a product to a customer who will take the product somewhere else to consume (car, washing machine, etc.). So the selling/marketing process works differently. But that doesn't concern management that much.
In order to build on your hotel experience you should try a school that has less marketing and more human resources and accounting studies. Most of the good hotel managers I know, have been front office or revenue managers (former sales managers have the people skills but not always the operations experience). But that's only my own experience.
If, on the other hand, you want to leave hotel business completely, than you should try a sales orientation. If there is one thing you learn in hotels, it's dealing with people. So there you could try marketing, sales, PR studies and get your foot into business through customer service/care.
I hope I answered some bits
Yep, most degrees are NOT confined to just one area of careers. With that business degree and depending on the school system, you might be able to teach in some of their schools.
thank u
Hiiiiiii..
I think you have to choose the Marketing section in Human Resource Management(HRM) because in marketing you get the nice job in the good reputed company on a high post..
i like fast company