Study resource

Globalisation revision notes

Use these revision notes for Globalisation in AQA Business 8132. The page is built from approved learning objectives for this topic and links back to the wider unit, topic hub, and related revision assets.

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revision notes

Resource type

Topic

Globalisation

AQAGCSEBusinessInfluences on business

Revision notes

  • Globalisation revision notes

    Globalisation

    Specification context

    Globalisation appears in AQA GCSE Business 8132.

    Topic overview

    Study how UK businesses compete internationally and how exchange rates affect importers and exporters. When revising this area, students should focus on accurate vocabulary, secure biological understanding, and the ability to explain each idea in a way that would score in an exam. The specification expects understanding, not just recognition, so revision should combine definitions, comparisons, and process explanations.

    Learning objectives

    • Explain globalisation and its effects on UK businesses.
    • Analyse benefits and drawbacks of globalisation for UK businesses.
    • Explain how UK businesses may compete internationally through better design, higher quality and lower prices.
    • Explain how exchange rates can affect profits and sales for businesses that import.
    • Explain how exchange rates can affect profits and sales for businesses that export.

    Objective-by-objective revision

    International competition and globalisation: Explain globalisation and its effects on UK businesses.

    To revise this objective well, start by naming the key biological idea in clear language. Then explain what it means in the context of Globalisation, using full scientific vocabulary rather than short labels. A high-quality answer should show cause and effect, structure and function, or process and outcome, depending on what the objective is asking you to describe. If the specification expects comparison, students should make both sides of the comparison explicit rather than describing just one side and assuming the contrast is obvious. Students often lose marks when they give a definition without linking it back to the exact process or structure being studied. A stronger response will connect the idea to the specification, use a direct example, and keep each sentence tightly focused on the wording of the objective. In revision, this means turning short notes into complete explanations and checking whether every sentence helps answer the exact curriculum statement instead of repeating general topic knowledge. A helpful self-check is to ask whether you could explain this objective to another student without reading from the page. If you can define the idea, explain why it matters, and connect it back to the broader biological topic, you are much more likely to perform well in exam questions that reward understanding rather than memorised fragments.

    International competition and globalisation: Analyse benefits and drawbacks of globalisation for UK businesses.

    To revise this objective well, start by naming the key biological idea in clear language. Then explain what it means in the context of Globalisation, using full scientific vocabulary rather than short labels. A high-quality answer should show cause and effect, structure and function, or process and outcome, depending on what the objective is asking you to describe. If the specification expects comparison, students should make both sides of the comparison explicit rather than describing just one side and assuming the contrast is obvious. Students often lose marks when they give a definition without linking it back to the exact process or structure being studied. A stronger response will connect the idea to the specification, use a direct example, and keep each sentence tightly focused on the wording of the objective. In revision, this means turning short notes into complete explanations and checking whether every sentence helps answer the exact curriculum statement instead of repeating general topic knowledge. A helpful self-check is to ask whether you could explain this objective to another student without reading from the page. If you can define the idea, explain why it matters, and connect it back to the broader biological topic, you are much more likely to perform well in exam questions that reward understanding rather than memorised fragments.

    International competition and globalisation: Explain how UK businesses may compete internationally through better design, higher quality and lower prices.

    To revise this objective well, start by naming the key biological idea in clear language. Then explain what it means in the context of Globalisation, using full scientific vocabulary rather than short labels. A high-quality answer should show cause and effect, structure and function, or process and outcome, depending on what the objective is asking you to describe. If the specification expects comparison, students should make both sides of the comparison explicit rather than describing just one side and assuming the contrast is obvious. Students often lose marks when they give a definition without linking it back to the exact process or structure being studied. A stronger response will connect the idea to the specification, use a direct example, and keep each sentence tightly focused on the wording of the objective. In revision, this means turning short notes into complete explanations and checking whether every sentence helps answer the exact curriculum statement instead of repeating general topic knowledge. A helpful self-check is to ask whether you could explain this objective to another student without reading from the page. If you can define the idea, explain why it matters, and connect it back to the broader biological topic, you are much more likely to perform well in exam questions that reward understanding rather than memorised fragments.

    Exchange rates: Explain how exchange rates can affect profits and sales for businesses that import.

    To revise this objective well, start by naming the key biological idea in clear language. Then explain what it means in the context of Globalisation, using full scientific vocabulary rather than short labels. A high-quality answer should show cause and effect, structure and function, or process and outcome, depending on what the objective is asking you to describe. If the specification expects comparison, students should make both sides of the comparison explicit rather than describing just one side and assuming the contrast is obvious. Students often lose marks when they give a definition without linking it back to the exact process or structure being studied. A stronger response will connect the idea to the specification, use a direct example, and keep each sentence tightly focused on the wording of the objective. In revision, this means turning short notes into complete explanations and checking whether every sentence helps answer the exact curriculum statement instead of repeating general topic knowledge. A helpful self-check is to ask whether you could explain this objective to another student without reading from the page. If you can define the idea, explain why it matters, and connect it back to the broader biological topic, you are much more likely to perform well in exam questions that reward understanding rather than memorised fragments.

    Exchange rates: Explain how exchange rates can affect profits and sales for businesses that export.

    To revise this objective well, start by naming the key biological idea in clear language. Then explain what it means in the context of Globalisation, using full scientific vocabulary rather than short labels. A high-quality answer should show cause and effect, structure and function, or process and outcome, depending on what the objective is asking you to describe. If the specification expects comparison, students should make both sides of the comparison explicit rather than describing just one side and assuming the contrast is obvious. Students often lose marks when they give a definition without linking it back to the exact process or structure being studied. A stronger response will connect the idea to the specification, use a direct example, and keep each sentence tightly focused on the wording of the objective. In revision, this means turning short notes into complete explanations and checking whether every sentence helps answer the exact curriculum statement instead of repeating general topic knowledge. A helpful self-check is to ask whether you could explain this objective to another student without reading from the page. If you can define the idea, explain why it matters, and connect it back to the broader biological topic, you are much more likely to perform well in exam questions that reward understanding rather than memorised fragments.

    Key terms

    • globalisation
    • design
    • quality
    • price
    • exchange rates
    • profit
    • sales

    Exam focus

    Use precise biological terminology, link structure to function where relevant, and explain each process step by step. Read the command word carefully, because a question that asks you to describe needs a different answer style from one that asks you to explain or compare. Strong revision means knowing both the fact and the reason it matters in the wider topic.

    Common mistakes to avoid

    • Avoid a vague answer when the question asks you to explain globalisation and its effects on uk businesses..
    • Avoid a vague answer when the question asks you to analyse benefits and drawbacks of globalisation for uk businesses..
    • Avoid a vague answer when the question asks you to explain how uk businesses may compete internationally through better design, higher quality and lower prices..
    • Avoid a vague answer when the question asks you to explain how exchange rates can affect profits and sales for businesses that import..
    • Avoid a vague answer when the question asks you to explain how exchange rates can affect profits and sales for businesses that export..

    Revision strategy

    A practical way to revise this topic is to learn the key terms first, then test yourself with flashcards, then move on to MCQs and practice explanations. If you can teach the idea aloud in a logical order and connect it directly to the learning objective, you are much more likely to produce a precise exam answer under time pressure.

    How exam questions usually test this topic

    Questions on this topic often reward precise use of language, clear sequencing, and the ability to connect a named structure or process to its function. That means students should avoid giving lists of disconnected facts and should instead build short explanations where each point logically leads to the next. A strong answer usually names the scientific idea, explains it clearly, and then ties it back to the exact wording of the question so the examiner can see that the response is focused and relevant.

    Final knowledge check

    Before moving on, make sure you can define the main terms, explain the important processes in full sentences, compare similar ideas accurately where needed, and recognise common traps in multiple-choice questions. If one part still feels uncertain, return to the matching learning objective and rebuild your explanation from the key vocabulary upward.

Globalisation revision notes | AQA Business | ExamCompanion