aimnova.
DashboardMy LearningStudy Plan

Stay in the loop

Study tips, product updates, and early access to new features.

aimnova.

AI-powered IB study platform with personalised plans, instant feedback, and examiner-style marking.

IB Subjects

  • IB Diploma
  • All IB Subjects
  • IB ESS
  • IB Business Management
  • Grade Calculator
  • Exam Timetable 2026
  • ESS Predictions
  • BM Predictions

Study Resources

  • Free Study Notes
  • Revision Guide
  • Flashcards
  • ESS Question Bank
  • BM Question Bank
  • Mock Exams
  • Past Paper Feedback
  • Exam Skills
  • Command Terms

Company

  • Features
  • Pricing
  • About Us
  • Blog
  • Contact
  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Cookies

© 2026 Aimnova. All rights reserved.

Made with 💜 for IB students worldwide

v0.1.367
NotesBusiness ManagementTopic 6.7Measures of dispersion
Back to Business Management Topics
6.7.21 min read

Measures of dispersion

IB Business Management • Unit 6

Exam preparation

Practice the questions examiners actually ask

Our question bank mirrors real IB exam papers. Practice under timed conditions and track your progress across topics.

Start Practicing

Contents

  • Range and standard deviation
  • Interpreting dispersion in business

📏 Range and standard deviation

Measures of dispersion show how spread out the data is. Are values clustered together or widely spread?

Range

  • Range = highest value − lowest value
  • Simple and quick to calculate
  • But only uses two values — ignores everything in between
  • Can be distorted by a single outlier

Standard deviation

  • Measures how far each value is from the mean on average
  • Low SD = data clustered close to the mean (consistent)
  • High SD = data spread out widely (variable, unpredictable)
  • More reliable than range because it uses ALL data points
You won't need to calculate standard deviation in the exam — just understand what a high or low SD means for the business.

💼 What does dispersion tell a business?

  • Low dispersion in sales → consistent, predictable revenue (easier to plan)
  • High dispersion in sales → volatile revenue (harder to forecast and budget)
  • Low dispersion in quality → consistent products (good for reputation)
  • High dispersion in quality → products vary a lot (bad for customer trust)
Example: Two shops both average $10 000 in weekly sales. Shop A ranges from $9 000–$11 000 (low spread, predictable). Shop B ranges from $3 000–$17 000 (high spread, unpredictable). Shop A is much easier to manage.

Try an IB Exam Question — Free AI Feedback

Test yourself on Measures of dispersion. Write your answer and get instant AI feedback — just like a real IB examiner.

one limitation of using correlation analysis in business decision-making. [2 marks]

Related Business Management Topics

Continue learning with these related topics from the same unit:

6.1.1What is a SWOT analysis?
6.1.2Using SWOT for strategic decisions
6.1.3Writing SWOT-based recommendations
6.2.1The Ansoff matrix
View all Business Management topics

Improve your exam technique

Command terms, paper structure, and mark-scheme tips for Business Management

Previous
6.7.1Measures of central tendency
Next
Using statistics in business decisions6.7.3

10 exam-style questions ready for you

Students who practice on Aimnova improve their scores by 15% on average. Get instant feedback that shows exactly how to improve your answers.

Practice Now — FreeView All Business Management Topics