Historically, the term business referred to activities or interests. By extension the word became (as recently as the 18th century) synonymous with "an individual commercial enterprise". It has also taken on the more general meaning of "a nexus of commercial activities".
People establish businesses in order to perform economic activities. With some exceptions (such as cooperatives, corporate bodies, non-profit organizations and institutions of government), businesses exist to produce profit. In other words, the owners and operators of a business have as one of their main objectives to receive or generate a financial return for their time, effort and capital.
One can classify businesses in many different ways. Service businesses offer intangible products and typically have different, usually smaller, capital requirements than manufacturers. Distributors will have different inventory control needs than a retailer or manufacturer.
Most legal jurisdictions specify the forms that a business can take, and a body of commercial law has developed for each type. Some common types include partnerships, corporations (also called limited liability companies), and sole proprietorships.
An industry can consist of a group of related businesses, such as the entertainment industry or the dairy industry. This definition resembles one of the more general meanings of "business", and the terms business and industry sometimes appear interchangeable. Thus a fisherman might say either (more colloquially) that he is in the "fishing business" or (somewhat grandiosely) that he works in the "fishing industry". Similarly, the word "trade" may serve as an equivalent of both "business" and "industry": Victorians might despise those "in trade", and one can still refer to working "in the rag trade", for example.
Quotations
"Business is in itself an evil." - Saint Augustine
"Whoever could make two ears of corn or two blades of grass to grow upon a spot of ground where only one grew before would deserve better of mankind and do more essential service to his country than the whole race of politicians put together." - Jonathan Swift
"The business of America is business." - Calvin Coolidge
Business topics
Wikipedia includes over 1200 business and economics articles, so not all appear listed here. This lists some of the main branches of business. For more specific topics, look at the various sublists.
- Accounting
- List of accounting topics
- Advertising
- Banking
- Big Business
- Business intelligence
- Business schools
- Capitalism
- Commerce
- Commercial law
- List of business law topics
- Companies
- List of companies
- Competition
- Consumer electronics
- Economics
- Financial economics
- Home economics
- List of economics topics
- Electronic commerce
- Ethics
- List of business ethics, political economy, and philosophy of business topics
- Finance
- List of finance topics
- Industry
- Intellectual property
- International trade
- List of international trade topics
- Insurance
- Investment
- Equity investment
- Institutional Fund Management
- List of business theorists
- List of corporate leaders
- List of commercial pairs
- List of popular business books
- Organizational development
- List of human resource management topics
- Administrative Assistant
- Management
- List of management topics
- Management information systems
- List of information technology management topics
- Manufacturing
- List of production topics
- Marketing
- Mass media
- Process management
- List of process management topics
- Project management
- List of project management topics
- Real Estate
- List of real estate topics
- Small business
- Tax
- Theory of constraints
- List of theory of constraints topics
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This article is from Wikipedia. All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License.

