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.
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.
Qualification | Topic Alignment | What’s covered |
---|---|---|
AQA GCSE Business | 1.3 & 2.5 | Cash flow, financial decisions, real-world application |
Pearson Edexcel GCSE | Theme 1.3 | Forecasting, finance types, financial risk |
OCR GCSE Economics | Component 1 & 2 | Market pressures, choices, budgeting |
WJEC GCSE Business | Finance & Decision Making | Links data, finance, planning and strategy |
SQA National 5 Economics | Personal & Market Economics | Decision-making, saving, borrowing, budgeting |
Cambridge IGCSE/A Level | Price systems, financial decisions | Connects demand, elasticity, risk with action |
IB Business Management HL/SL | Finance, Strategy, Risk | Strategic thinking, stakeholder impact, resilience |
Pearson A-Level Business & Economics | Themes 1, 3, 4 | Financial decision-making, interpreting data, long-term planning |
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.
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.
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.
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.
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 |
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:
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.
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 |
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.
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.
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.
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 is an interactive digital resource that helps students fully grasp four core types of economic elasticity:
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.
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 |
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.
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.
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.
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 is a hands-on simulation where students design the organisational structure of a business. They:
Students work with realistic business contexts and are assessed on how well they structure the business, delegate tasks, and explain their thinking.
Qualification | Topic | Alignment |
---|---|---|
GCSE Business Studies | Theme 1: Business Activity | Hierarchies, job roles, responsibility allocation |
A-Level Business | 3.1: What is a Business | Organisational structure, spans of control, hierarchy |
A-Level Business | 3.3: Management Performance | Delegation, structure, accountability |
A-Level Business | 3.7: Strategic Direction | Structural change and implementation |
A-Level Economics | Theme 4: Business Economics | Internal organisation, efficiency, principal-agent issues |
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.
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.
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.
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.