How Our Tools are Syllabus-Aligned

Smaller tools. Big thinking.

Tools that fit your classroom

Alongside our long-form simulations, we offer a suite of sharp,
focused resources, designed to slot straight into lessons and support students in applying what they’ve learned.

These are syllabus-aligned tools, games, and aids built for clarity, challenge, and engagement.

They don’t replace your teaching. They reinforce it.

They don’t hand out answers. They make students think.

Cash Flow Simulation Tool

Real-world decisions. Real learning. Real outcomes.

What the tool does

Students step into the role of a small business owner. They forecast income, handle unpredictable events, choose financing options, and make strategic decisions to stay afloat. The simulation tracks every choice and gives real-time feedback through a performance dashboard. At the end, students receive a personalised report that evaluates their financial decisions and strategic thinking.

How it works

  • Forecasting – Students estimate income and match it against fixed costs to calculate a starting cash position.
  • Scenario Engine – Realistic business events (e.g., delayed payments, supplier issues) present choices. Every option impacts cash flow, reputation, and risk levels.
  • Finance Tools – Students select from loans, overdrafts, grants, or investors to support cash flow, each with pros, cons, and reputational consequences.
  • Dashboard Feedback – A live visual dashboard tracks cash movement and forecasts, with alerts for critical thresholds.

What it teaches

  • Financial literacy (cash flow, budgeting, financing)
  • Risk management and decision-making
  • Strategic planning and forecasting
  • Resilience and adaptability
  • Interpreting data under pressure

Why it works

  • Realistic constraints – Students must decide without full information, just like real business owners.
  • Risk-reward learning – Every choice has trade-offs across cash, reputation, and risk.
  • Visible consequences – Decisions impact future rounds, creating meaningful stakes.
  • Live feedback – Dashboards make abstract financial ideas visual and immediate.
  • Tiered challenge – It starts simple and builds in complexity, supporting confidence and stretch.

Syllabus Alignment

QualificationTopic AlignmentWhat’s covered
AQA GCSE Business1.3 & 2.5Cash flow, financial decisions, real-world application
Pearson Edexcel GCSETheme 1.3Forecasting, finance types, financial risk
OCR GCSE EconomicsComponent 1 & 2Market pressures, choices, budgeting
WJEC GCSE BusinessFinance & Decision MakingLinks data, finance, planning and strategy
SQA National 5 EconomicsPersonal & Market EconomicsDecision-making, saving, borrowing, budgeting
Cambridge IGCSE/A LevelPrice systems, financial decisionsConnects demand, elasticity, risk with action
IB Business Management HL/SLFinance, Strategy, RiskStrategic thinking, stakeholder impact, resilience
Pearson A-Level Business & EconomicsThemes 1, 3, 4Financial decision-making, interpreting data, long-term planning

What aligns it

  • Forecasting connects directly to cash flow planning.
  • Unexpected events mirror external pressures in business case studies.
  • Finance tools directly model sources of finance in both GCSE and A-Level specs.
  • Reputation tracking links to customer relationships and quality control.
  • Real-time dashboards visualise key data for interpretation and application.

What it supports

  • Improved exam outcomes – Students better understand and apply finance concepts.
  • Work-ready skills – They learn to plan, adapt, and think long-term.
  • Increased engagement – Especially for students who find theory abstract or disconnected.
  • Confident learners – Financial concepts are no longer abstract—they’re experienced.

For teachers

This is great because it’s ready to go, fully aligned, and instantly useful in class. It tackles the hardest bit of business teaching—making financial decisions make sense—and saves hours of resource planning.

For careers leads

This is great because it’s an easy win for Gatsby Benchmark 5 and 6. It builds employability skills, links clearly to entrepreneurship and financial capability, and gives students a realistic sense of how finance shapes business decisions.

For SLT

This is great because it drives curriculum consistency, supports attainment, and takes pressure off staff. It works across year groups, exam boards and mixed abilities with no extra workload.

For headteachers

This is great because it delivers measurable impact, supports school improvement plans, and aligns with Ofsted priorities on progression and practical skills. It’s scalable, strategic and supports both student and staff development.

Adapt & Thrive Business Simulator

Strategic thinking, real-world scenarios, syllabus-aligned outcomes

What the tool does

The Adapt & Thrive Business Simulator puts students in the shoes of a CEO at a mid-sized consumer electronics firm. Across 20 rounds, they face a stream of challenges based on real external factors—from political shifts to environmental pressures. They choose how to respond, and their decisions shape four critical business metrics: Profitability, Reputation, Compliance, and Adaptability. Every choice has consequences. Every round builds on the last. At the end, students receive a detailed report on their strategic thinking, decision-making, and performance across multiple dimensions of business success.

How it works

  • Scenario-based learning: Each round presents a challenge linked to PESTLE+E categories (Political, Economic, Social, Technological, Legal, Ethical, Environmental).
  • Decisions with depth: Three strategic options per scenario, all realistic—none obviously “right.”
  • Real-time metrics: A live dashboard shows impacts on profitability, reputation, compliance, and adaptability after each decision.
  • Smart scenario balancing: The simulator ensures students face a well-rounded mix of external pressures.
  • Visual tracking: Historical metric graphs help students link cause and effect.
  • End-of-game report: A PDF breakdown of choices, performance and growth areas.

Why it works

  • It reflects reality: There are no perfect answers—just strategic trade-offs.
  • It builds confidence, not confusion: Tooltips and prompts guide without overwhelming.
  • It develops higher-order thinking: Evaluate. Justify. Reflect.
  • It rewards long-term strategy: Balance short-term wins with long-term goals.
  • It’s safe to fail: Students can experiment, fail, learn, and try again—without consequences.

Syllabus Alignment

Exam Board Key Areas Covered How It Aligns
AQA GCSE Business Business operations, external influences, decision-making, interpreting data Direct application of production decisions, customer expectations, and external risks
Edexcel GCSE Business Theme 2: Making business decisions Strong fit with finance, risk, stakeholder engagement, and change
OCR GCSE Economics The role of markets and business behaviour Strategic decision-making under market constraints and policy changes
WJEC GCSE Business Business activity, operations, ethics Clear links with operations strategy, stakeholder needs, and sustainability
Cambridge IGCSE Business External influences and business activity Covers change management, legal and social issues, and corporate responsibility
SQA National 5 Government policy, markets, international trade Simulates responses to policy shifts and market pressures
IB Business Management Business strategy, ethics, innovation Simulates senior-level decision-making aligned to HL/SL themes
AQA A-Level Business Strategic direction, innovation, risk, CSR Scenario-based strategy evaluation—ideal for Paper 3 application
Pearson A-Level Economics Government policy, market failure, business behaviour Models externalities, interventions, and market impacts

What it supports

  • Curriculum Depth: Moves from recall to application, justification, and strategic thinking.
  • Skill Development: Builds systems thinking, ethical reasoning, leadership and risk analysis.
  • Exam Readiness: Models real-world evaluation and top-band assessment skills.
  • Student Confidence: Helps students visualise, test, and refine their business thinking.

For teachers

This is great because it’s syllabus-aligned, easy to run, and builds exam-level thinking without increasing your planning load. Plug-and-play. Insightful. It works.

For careers leads

This is great because it maps directly to Gatsby Benchmarks 5 and 6, builds real workplace skills, and gives students the chance to lead and reflect on business decisions that matter.

For SLT

This is great because it supports consistent delivery of higher-order thinking, without disrupting systems. Easy to implement. High impact. Aligned with curriculum and student outcomes.

For headteachers

This is great because it’s strategic, scalable and measurable. It hits multiple improvement plan goals—academic performance, personal development, and employability—without adding pressure to staff.

Inventory Manager Simulation

Operational thinking. Real outcomes. Syllabus-aligned.

What the tool does

Inventory Manager is a plug-and-play simulation that helps students master stock control, production decisions, and operational efficiency. In a controlled, risk-free environment, students:

  • Choose production methods (job, batch, flow)
  • Set stock levels and reorder points
  • Simulate customer demand over time
  • Analyse trade-offs in cost, stock levels, and customer satisfaction

They receive real-time feedback through a performance dashboard and a badge-based achievement system (bronze, silver, gold) that tracks fulfilment rates, cost efficiency, and improvement over time.

How it works

  • Stock Management: Students decide how much inventory to hold and when to reorder. These decisions affect cost, availability, and waste.
  • Production Methods: Students pick between job, batch or flow production—each with trade-offs in setup time, flexibility, and unit cost.
  • Demand Simulator: Simulates customer orders over time (typically 6 weeks). Stock levels are updated in real-time against actual demand, showing overstocking, stockouts, and responsiveness.
  • Performance Dashboard: After each run, students get feedback on: demand fulfilment rate, storage costs, wasted units, stockout frequency. All data is saved to show progress and highlight decision-making patterns.

Why it works

  • Authentic trade-offs – cost vs customer service
  • Progressive complexity – scaffolded learning from basics to strategy
  • Visual cause-and-effect – decisions play out in real time
  • Flexible scenarios – easily adjusted to learner needs
  • Clear performance targets – badge system provides motivation and tracking

What it teaches

  • Decision-making under resource constraints
  • Operational efficiency and production strategy
  • Quantitative analysis of data, costs, and outcomes
  • Scenario planning and risk management
  • Strategic thinking around inventory and demand forecasting
  • Resilience and reflection through trial and error

Syllabus alignment

Level Exam Board Topics Covered How It Aligns
GCSE Business AQA, Edexcel, OCR, WJEC, SQA, Cambridge Operations Management, Resource Planning, Finance Demonstrates stock control (buffer stock, JIT), production types, and the trade-offs in operational decisions
A-Level Business AQA, Pearson, OCR, Cambridge Operations Strategy, Inventory Control, Efficiency Direct application of inventory systems, lead times, production planning, cost control, and real-time responsiveness
A-Level Economics AQA, Pearson, Cambridge, IB Resource Allocation, Production and Costs Models efficiency and production choices, links to opportunity cost and real-world allocation of limited resources

What it supports

  • Better answers in operations and resource planning questions
  • More confident use of data in exam scenarios
  • Clear links between abstract theory and business application
  • Higher engagement, especially in mixed-ability or hands-on learners
  • A safe space to practise decision-making without real-world consequences

For teachers

This is great because it’s a ready-to-go way to teach inventory management, decision-making, and production strategy—without extra prep. You get immediate engagement, tangible results, and lesson-ready feedback tools.

For careers leads

This is great because it builds essential workplace skills like efficiency, forecasting, planning and resilience—core to logistics, supply chain, manufacturing, and retail careers. It maps clearly to Gatsby Benchmark 5 (encounters with employers) through simulation of real roles.

For SLT

This is great because it supports operational thinking across GCSE and A-Level business content, fits cleanly into curriculum maps, and raises attainment in topics that are often abstract or under-taught. It’s easy to embed, scalable across year groups, and shows measurable student progress.

For headteachers

This is great because it delivers high-impact learning with minimal staff training. It improves curriculum depth, student engagement, and exam performance in business and economics. It supports strategic goals around employability, real-world learning, and results.

Elasticity Explorer

Built for clarity. Plug-and-play for the real classroom.

What the tool does

Elasticity Explorer is an interactive digital resource that helps students fully grasp four core types of economic elasticity:

  • Price Elasticity of Demand (PED)
  • Price Elasticity of Supply (PES)
  • Income Elasticity of Demand (YED)
  • Cross Elasticity of Demand (XED)

Students work through each concept in order, engaging with real-world scenarios and manipulating variables to calculate and interpret elasticity values. The tool provides instant feedback through interactive charts and adaptive responses, helping learners build confidence and fluency with elasticity—an area many students find abstract or tricky.

How the tool works

  • Scenario-Based Learning: Real-world case studies where students predict outcomes and calculate elasticity from given data.
  • Interactive Calculations: Sliders and graphs allow students to adjust variables and see real-time changes in elasticity values.
  • Progressive Learning Path: PED through to XED, building on prior learning and tracking progress across sessions.
  • Adaptive Feedback: Real-time explanations based on common errors and misconceptions to support continued progress.

Why it works this way

  • Scaffolded learning structure: Starts with the most intuitive type of elasticity and builds logically to more complex ones.
  • Visual-first approach: Dynamic charts show elasticity in action—supporting diverse learners.
  • Active engagement: Students make predictions, test them, and reflect on the results—deepening understanding.
  • Real-world grounding: Business scenarios keep content practical and relatable.

What it teaches

  • Core economic understanding (how demand or supply responds to changes)
  • Mathematical confidence (percentages, coefficients, calculations)
  • Analytical thinking (cause and effect, forecasting, market reactions)
  • Application to business (pricing, strategy, product targeting)

Syllabus alignment

Qualification Specification Topics Direct Alignment
GCSE Business Studies Influences on Business (AQA 3.2) Competition, market behaviour, pricing decisions
GCSE Economics Markets and Price Mechanism Price determination, consumer behaviour, elasticity
A-Level Economics (AS & A2) Price Determination, Business Behaviour PED, PES, YED, XED; links to pricing, revenue, and strategy
AQA Economics 3.1.2.1 – 3.1.2.4 Full coverage of elasticity and its business applications
Edexcel Economics A Theme 1.3.3 – 1.3.6 Elasticity types, coefficient interpretation, market impact
OCR Economics 1.1.4 – 1.1.6 Application of elasticity to market outcomes and business strategy

What aligns it

  • Sliders and inputs = elasticity calculations and interpretation
  • Live graphs = visualising elasticity responsiveness
  • Scenarios = mirrors case study structure in exams
  • Progress saving = revision, reflection, and independent learning support

What it supports

  • Students who struggle to connect maths to meaning
  • Stronger interpretation in long-answer and case study questions
  • Confidence in using terms like ‘elastic’, ‘inelastic’, ‘unitary’, etc.
  • Higher engagement for visual and hands-on learners

For teachers

This is great because it saves time on building examples and explaining the “why” behind elasticity. It gives students something they can try, test, and learn from—without you having to create endless graphs or worksheets. Use it to introduce, consolidate, or revise key concepts. Works across exam boards.

For careers leads

This is great because it supports strategic thinking and data interpretation—two of the most in-demand workplace skills. Elasticity is not just about economics, it’s about business forecasting, marketing insight, and pricing strategy. The scenarios feel real, and that matters for careers conversations.

For SLT

This is great because it delivers curriculum consistency, measurable impact, and deeper learning on a hard-to-teach topic. It works across GCSE and A-Level, builds numeracy and business thinking, and is classroom-ready. It reduces workload without reducing ambition.

For headteachers

This is great because it supports performance in a core area of Economics and Business across all major boards. It boosts student engagement with maths in context, and builds future-ready thinking. Easy to scale, zero risk to staff time, and clear evidence of learning impact.

Organise The Org

Real roles. Real thinking. Real-world structure.

What the tool does

Organise The Org is a hands-on simulation where students design the organisational structure of a business. They:

  • Assign roles to a visual hierarchy
  • Define responsibilities and reporting lines
  • Justify their choices
  • Receive instant, targeted feedback from an AI assessor

Students work with realistic business contexts and are assessed on how well they structure the business, delegate tasks, and explain their thinking.

How the tool works

  • Organisational Design Interface: Students build a company hierarchy by dragging and dropping roles, assigning responsibilities, and explaining their reasoning.
  • Assessment System: AI assesses structure, accountability, and depth of thinking through three key scores (Structure, Accountability, Thinking).
  • Feedback Mechanism: Students receive a summary score, detailed breakdown, and improvement advice.

Why it works this way

  • Active learning – students build, not just memorise
  • Real application – scenarios reflect actual business needs
  • Immediate feedback – no waiting for marking
  • Scaffolded decisions – supports structured thinking

What it teaches

  • Critical Thinking: Role matching, structure logic, strategic justification
  • Business Understanding: Hierarchies, functions, integration
  • Management Practice: Delegation, responsibility, communication

Syllabus alignment

QualificationTopicAlignment
GCSE Business StudiesTheme 1: Business ActivityHierarchies, job roles, responsibility allocation
A-Level Business3.1: What is a BusinessOrganisational structure, spans of control, hierarchy
A-Level Business3.3: Management PerformanceDelegation, structure, accountability
A-Level Business3.7: Strategic DirectionStructural change and implementation
A-Level EconomicsTheme 4: Business EconomicsInternal organisation, efficiency, principal-agent issues

What aligns it

  • Visual hierarchy builder = hierarchy, span of control, chain of command
  • Role-responsibility matching = real-world delegation logic
  • AI feedback = mirrors exam skills (analysis, evaluation, justification)
  • Scenarios = business context for each decision

What it supports

  • Understanding of how businesses are structured
  • Improved long-answer responses on structure and decision-making
  • Application of theory to real-world case studies
  • Confidence in strategic decision-making

For teachers

This is great because it turns a dry topic into an active challenge. Students apply knowledge, not just recall it. The AI handles feedback, and the tool reinforces key ideas in roles, structures, and responsibility without extra marking or prep.

For careers leads

This is great because it shows students what real organisational thinking looks like—from managing a team to assigning tasks. It links directly to employability, leadership, and planning skills relevant to every sector.

For SLT

This is great because it delivers high-impact, low-maintenance learning. It builds strategic thinking, supports exam performance, and models cross-departmental integration. Easy to timetable, easy to track, built for consistency.

For headteachers

This is great because it offers measurable learning gains in an often underdeveloped area. It strengthens business literacy, supports progression, and shows clear links between classroom content and leadership thinking. Minimal staff training needed, maximum curriculum alignment.

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