Syllabus: AQA - AS and A Level Business
Module: 3.7 Analysing the Strategic Position of a Business (A-level only)
Lesson: 3.7.8 Analysing Strategic Options: Investment Appraisal
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Introduction
This section of the AQA A-level Business syllabus, 3.7.8 Analysing Strategic Options: Investment Appraisal, forms a critical part of developing financial literacy and strategic thinking in students. It equips learners with analytical tools to evaluate major financial decisions — a skill essential to commercial awareness and career readiness. Understanding investment appraisal builds student confidence in interpreting data, assessing risk, and making informed business decisions, making it ideal for cross-curricular application and careers alignment. This topic is assessed only at A-level.
Key Concepts
According to the AQA A-level Business specification, students must be able to:
Understand and apply financial investment appraisal techniques, including:
Payback Period
Average Rate of Return (ARR)
Net Present Value (NPV)
Interpret investment data, comparing options to support decision-making.
Evaluate investment decisions based on both quantitative outcomes and non-financial factors, such as:
Risk and uncertainty
Strategic fit
Corporate objectives
Stakeholder reactions
Understand discounting and present value concepts in relation to NPV calculations.
These skills are directly aligned with the quantitative skills outlined in the assessment annex of the AQA syllabus and are crucial for developing evidence-based commercial judgement.
Real-World Relevance
Investment appraisal is used by every major organisation when deciding whether to pursue a new project, such as launching a product or expanding operations. For example:
Amazon’s investment in warehouse robotics involved an NPV analysis to justify long-term cost savings.
Netflix’s decision to fund original content was assessed using ARR and break-even timelines to determine viability.
In the public sector, councils often apply payback and NPV when planning infrastructure such as schools or transport hubs.
These decisions balance projected financial returns with strategic risks, mirroring classroom learning in authentic contexts.
How It’s Assessed
In AQA A-level Business, investment appraisal questions typically appear in:
Paper 2 (Data response) and
Paper 3 (Case study-driven essay questions)
Command words include:
“Calculate” – requiring accurate use of formulae
“Interpret” – explaining implications of results
“Evaluate” – assessing the strengths, weaknesses, and overall value of an investment decision
Assessment objectives covered:
AO1: Knowledge and understanding of techniques
AO2: Application to real or hypothetical business scenarios
AO3: Analysis of advantages, limitations, or comparisons
AO4: Evaluation with justified recommendations
A typical exam task may provide a table of financial data and ask students to compute all three appraisal techniques, then argue which project should be selected based on both financial and qualitative evidence.
Enterprise Skills Integration
This topic naturally embeds several themes from the Enterprise Skills Thematic Framework:
Decision-Making & Problem-Solving
Evaluating options using numerical and strategic data
Interpreting uncertainty and risk
Prioritising based on long-term objectives
Commercial Awareness
Understanding how organisations create value through capital investment
Applying financial reasoning in real-world scenarios
Exploring how finance links with operational, strategic, and marketing considerations
Workplace Readiness
Reflecting how financial literacy is essential in every role — from project managers to public service decision-makers
In Enterprise Skills simulations and Skills Hub tools, investment appraisal often forms part of wider business strategy decisions, helping students experience realistic consequences of their choices in a safe learning environment.
Careers Links
This topic is closely aligned with Gatsby Benchmarks 4, 5, and 6:
Benchmark 4: Linking curriculum to careers
Students learn about roles such as:Financial analysts
Project managers
Investment consultants
Public sector procurement officers
Benchmark 5: Employer Encounters
Simulation events or video interviews (within Skills Hub Futures) show how real professionals use these techniques to make strategic decisions.Benchmark 6: Experience of Workplaces
Students engage with simulated investment dilemmas with real stakes — mirroring boardroom-style decisions.
Career pathways this topic supports:
Finance and banking
Corporate strategy
Public policy and infrastructure
Entrepreneurship (evaluating start-up investments)
Teaching Notes
Teaching Tips:
Start with a relatable example: “Should the school invest in solar panels or a new IT lab?” This grounds the maths in real decision-making.
Use structured templates for calculations to reduce cognitive load.
Introduce decision-making under uncertainty with scenarios — e.g., what if market conditions change?
Common Pitfalls:
Students often confuse payback with ARR — clear visual timelines can help.
NPV is conceptually difficult; spend time unpacking discounting and the time value of money.
Encourage learners to go beyond “which has the best result” and consider qualitative impacts.
Extension Ideas:
Run a mock investment pitch, where student groups present competing projects to a “board”.
Introduce real company investment cases and ask students to suggest which tool the business might have used and why.
Recommended Tools:
Enterprise Skills’ Skills Hub Business: includes interactive decision tools and templates aligned to AQA syllabus points.
Skills Hub Futures: offers careers-linked scenarios for whole-school delivery — no prep required.