🎯 Stakeholder Influence and Impact
Big Idea: Stakeholders do not just passively receive the effects of business decisions -- they actively influence those decisions too. Understanding this two-way relationship is key.
How stakeholders exert influence
- Shareholders -- vote at annual general meetings (AGMs), elect board directors, approve major decisions
- Employees -- negotiate through trade unions, can take industrial action (strikes, work-to-rule), share ideas through suggestion schemes
- Customers -- influence through purchasing choices (buying or boycotting), leave reviews, complain on social media
- Government -- sets regulations, changes tax policy, provides incentives or imposes penalties
- Pressure groups -- run public campaigns, organise protests, use media to draw attention to issues
- Suppliers -- can refuse to supply, change terms, or offer preferential treatment to competitors
- Banks -- can refuse loans, change interest rates, or call in debts
How decisions affect different groups
Every significant business decision creates winners and losers among stakeholder groups.
- Cost-cutting -- may cause redundancies (negative for employees) but increase profits (positive for shareholders)
- Price increases -- customers may switch to competitors (negative) but revenue per unit rises (positive for owners)
- Expansion into new markets -- community gains jobs (positive) but faces increased traffic and noise (negative)
- Ethical misconduct -- reputation damage affects everyone: customers leave, employees are embarrassed, share price falls
- New technology adoption -- some jobs may be lost (negative for affected workers) but efficiency and quality improve (positive for customers)
- Outsourcing production -- lower costs (positive for shareholders) but domestic job losses (negative for employees and community)
Every decision creates winners and losers. The best exam answers identify and explain BOTH sides.
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When ethical issues affect stakeholders
Ethical failures create a cascade of negative effects across multiple stakeholder groups.
- Reputation damage -- customers lose loyalty and switch to competitors
- Staff morale drops -- productivity falls, absenteeism rises, talented people leave
- Investors sell shares -- share price falls, making it harder to raise future finance
- Regulators impose fines -- direct financial cost plus ongoing compliance requirements
- Community trust erodes -- local opposition to future business plans, difficulty getting planning permission
- Media scrutiny increases -- every future mistake gets amplified
In ethical impact questions, identify at least 2-3 different stakeholder groups and explain how EACH is affected differently. Show the ripple effect across the whole business.
A food company is caught using unsafe ingredients. Customers stop buying (revenue drops). Employees are embarrassed to work there (morale drops). Shareholders sell (share price crashes). Government investigates (fines and restrictions). Suppliers distance themselves (supply chain disrupted). One ethical failure affects EVERYONE.