Systems Thinking
Donella Meadows defines a system as “an interconnected set of elements that is coherently organized in a way that achieves something… A system must consist of three kinds of things: elements, interconnections and a function or purpose” (Meadows, 11). Elements are the individual parts of a system which tend to be more visible and easy to recognize. Interconnections are the relationships that hold the elements of a system together or... Read More
SWOT Analysis
An acronym for a common approach to marketing and strategic planning that emphasizes comparisons between companies and/or products and services to find “holes” or positions in the market that represent more successful market opportunities as well as threats that should be alleviated. Strengths = A comparison listing of competing company, product, or service strengths for the purpose of identifying which strengths a company or offering might have... Read More
Sustainable Growth Ratio
The rate of growth a company can attain without changing its profit margin, assets-to-sales ratio, debt-to-equity ratio, or dividend payout ratio, or without excessive borrowing or issuing new stock. (SGR = plowback ratio • ROE) Read More
Sustainable Development
An approach to developing anything that recognizes the need to meet the challenges of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs. Read More
Sustainable Design
The process of developing products, services, and organizations that comply with the principles of economic, social, and ecological sustainability. There are many principles of sustainable design, including a customer-centric approach, dematerialization, transmaterialization, and biomimicry. Read More
Sustainability
Development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs. This definition was created in 1987 at the World Commission on Environment and Development (the Brundtland Commission). It is enshrined in the Swiss federal constitution. It is similar to the “seventh generation” philosophy of the Native American Iroquois Confederacy, mandating that chiefs always consider the... Read More
Supply-side Economics
A school of macroeconomic thought which emphasizes the importance of tax cuts and business incentives in encouraging economic growth. This follows the belief that businesses and individuals will use their tax savings to create new businesses and expand old businesses, which in turn will increase productivity, employment, and general well-being. Read More
Supply Chain
A network of individuals or organizations that performs the functions of procurement of materials; transformation of these material into intermediate and finished products; and distribution of these finished products to customers. Read More
Sunk Costs
Used in business decision-making, costs which have already been incurred and which cannot be recovered to any significant degree and, thus, should be ignored. Read More
Substance Flow Analysis (SFA)
A method of assessing the value of materials and energy used in creating a product. Read More
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