Syllabus: Cambridge - IGCSE Business Studies
Module: 1.5 Business Objectives and Stakeholder Objectives
Lesson: 1.5.1 Businesses can have Several Objectives and the Importance of them can Change
Jump to Section:
Introduction
This lesson links directly to the Cambridge IGCSE Business Studies (0450) syllabus, specifically section 1.5.1, which introduces the idea that businesses can have multiple objectives, and that these objectives may evolve over time. This topic is critical for developing commercial awareness — understanding that businesses aren’t static entities but adapt to external environments, stakeholder pressures, and internal growth strategies.
The lesson provides a natural platform to build real-world problem-solving skills and links powerfully to Gatsby Benchmark 4 by helping students see how curriculum content connects to careers and commercial thinking.
Key Concepts
This syllabus point covers the following core areas:
Types of business objectives, including:
Survival
Profit maximisation
Growth
Market share
Customer satisfaction
Social and ethical goals
Reasons businesses may pursue several objectives simultaneously:
Balancing short-term survival with long-term growth
Meeting stakeholder expectations (e.g. employees, shareholders, community)
How and why objectives change:
Changes in market conditions
New competitors or regulation
Internal strategic decisions (e.g. mergers, new leadership)
Shifting stakeholder priorities
Stakeholder conflict and compromise:
Recognising that stakeholder objectives can align or clash (e.g. cost-cutting for profit vs staff welfare)
The importance of managing these tensions
Real-World Relevance
Modern businesses regularly reassess their objectives. Consider Marks & Spencer, which shifted its focus from aggressive growth to sustainability and ethical sourcing in response to changing consumer expectations. Similarly, Tesco temporarily prioritised survival during the 2014 accounting scandal, moving away from growth targets to stabilise its operations.
In the small business sector, a local café might begin with survival as its main goal, later focusing on growth through franchising. Stakeholders such as investors, local communities, and employees may influence the direction of these goals.
These examples help students understand that business decisions are not made in isolation, but are shaped by a range of external and internal factors.
How It’s Assessed
Cambridge IGCSE assessment typically includes:
Multiple-choice questions (Paper 1) testing recognition of objectives
Short-answer questions requiring definition or identification of different objectives
Data response questions where students must interpret scenarios and suggest suitable objectives
Extended writing questions (6–8 marks) asking students to evaluate how objectives may change and why, often requiring balance and stakeholder analysis
Command words to highlight:
Identify – name or state
Explain – give reasons or causes
Analyse – break down with reasons and implications
Evaluate – weigh up arguments or outcomes, and provide a justified conclusion
Enterprise Skills Integration
This lesson presents rich opportunities to develop core enterprise and employability skills, particularly:
Decision-making: choosing between conflicting objectives (e.g. growth vs ethics)
Problem-solving: navigating stakeholder conflict in realistic case scenarios
Commercial awareness: understanding how businesses operate in dynamic environments
Communication: explaining and justifying objectives to different stakeholders
Enterprise Skills tools such as stakeholder analysis matrices, business model scenario planners, or cost-benefit worksheets (available within the Skills Hub) help students engage with these ideas practically and confidently.
Careers Links
This topic maps directly to Gatsby Benchmarks 4, 5, and 6:
Benchmark 4: Curriculum linked to careers — students explore how objectives vary by business model, sector, and size
Benchmark 5: Employer examples — simulations or guest speakers can show how objectives are managed in their workplace
Benchmark 6: Simulated experiences — through business simulations, students take roles such as Managing Director or Finance Lead and must agree on strategic objectives under pressure
Careers linked to this topic include:
Business Analyst – understanding organisational goals and performance
Operations Manager – balancing cost control with service delivery
CSR Manager – managing social and ethical objectives
Marketing Executive – working to meet brand visibility or market share objectives
Teaching Notes
Common Pitfalls to Watch For:
Students confusing business aims (broad goals) with objectives (specific, measurable outcomes)
Oversimplifying stakeholder relationships — they’re not always in conflict
Assuming objectives never change once a business is established
Recommended Activities:
Mini case studies: Present businesses at different stages (start-up vs established) and ask students to identify likely objectives
Stakeholder role play: Assign students roles (employee, owner, customer) to debate a strategic shift (e.g. moving production overseas)
Objective mapping task: Link stakeholder interests to corresponding business objectives in real-world companies
Stretch and Challenge:
Introduce the idea of SMART objectives and how businesses measure progress
Explore mission statements and their influence on setting objectives
Zero-prep resource suggestion:
Use Skills Hub’s “Customer Focus” and “Data-Driven Decisions” sessions to deepen understanding of stakeholder needs and decision-making in real-world scenarios.