Alvik said:
Nowhere on the syllabus does it say that you must study a certain business.
Stop making people paranoid.
You can do any business you want as long as it relates to the question. I have like 8 different business', each relating to different parts of the syllabus.
And if you do resort to making something up, make it at least slightly realistic. And don't make up a company. Use a real business and give a fake example of what the business does.
Agreed (except I'm not that organised with the case studies...)
Just a minor suggestion though, if you do use the real business and make up an example, be careful that it doesn't clash with what a real business does. Lots of people do CCA for example, so you wouldn't want to make up anything about that in case you're wrong as many people do that and markers would tend to know that business quite well. Whatever works for you works, but I'd really just go to a website and get a few small case studies that can tie into the syllabus.
partymaster01 said:
am i fine with westfield?
Yes, I've seen full marks for Westfield, so you're fine with that as long as you can tie it in well with the question. I haven't done Westfield so I can't personally help, but I did find this on the net.
Question 29 in the 2002 paper says:
Outline the reasons why businesses expand globally, and critically analyse the political, social/cultural and management issues that arise with a global workforce.
You can download the 20/20 response here (haven't read the whole thing myself):
http://arc.boardofstudies.nsw.edu.a...040/files/samples/qexemplar/qexemplar_q29.pdf
Having said that, you would be fine with any business, as long as it suit the question. For example, you wouldn't use Westfield if you wanted to talk about exclusive distribution channels. You want to be able to cover all 5 topics with a few case studies, unless you can find one that does EVERYTHING.