Chapter 10 Being Part of a Company
DOI: 10.23912/978-1-908999-97-9-2506 | ISBN: 978-1-908999-97-9 |
Published: 30 June 2014 | Component type: chapter |
Published in: Essential Financial Techniques for Hospitality Managers 2edn | Parent DOI: 10.23912/978-1-908999-97-9-2479 |
Abstract
Some of you may work in a very small business, where you know the owner and everybody else in the organisation. The majority of the businesses in hospitality are small – pubs, restaurants, cafes, visitor attractions and so on.
But for others, you may feel that you are a very small part of a very large organisation. Some hospitality companies are enormous – and may well be part of an even larger conglomerate (a multi-industry, multinational corporation). Businesses change ownership frequently – some of the big names of five years ago are no longer around in the same way, and other previously small names are now big ones.
Whatever the size of the business, you do count, and in this chapter we want to
show you how you fit into the larger organisation – whether for now or for the future. We will look at the types of ownership and then the structure of companies and the type of accounts that they do. Later on we will consider two other ways that businesses can operate – under franchise and by management contract – where the building is owned by one entity but run by another.
By the end of this chapter, therefore, you should be able to:
- Distinguish between the different types of company ownership
- Describe the basic format of a company report
- Describe the differences between a franchise and a management contract.
Sample content
Contributors
- Dr Cathy Burgess, Oxford Brookes University (Author)
For the source title:
- Dr Cathy Burgess, Oxford Brookes University (Author)
Cite as
Burgess, 2014
Burgess, D.C. (2014) "Chapter 10 Being Part of a Company" In: Burgess, D.C. (ed) . Oxford: Goodfellow Publishers http://dx.doi.org/10.23912/978-1-908999-97-9-2506