Module 1: Introduction and Foundations of Product Selection
Lesson 2: The 8 Business Capital — Your Decision-Making Backbone
Many new business learners feel lost when trying to choose the right business. They often hear random advice and confusing ideas. This course offers a simple way to decide: using the 8 Business Capital. These business capital are personal assets you already have or can access. When you understand and use them, your decision-making becomes easier and more clear.
By the end of this lesson, you will know what the 8 Business Capital are and how they guide you in choosing a business that fits your strengths, interests, and situation. You will also understand how this course uses the 8 Business Capital at every step to help you find your most profitable business idea.
Key Concepts
• What are the 8 Business Capital?
• How They Help You Find Your Most Suitable Business Idea
• Overview of How This Course Will Work Step-by-Step
• Role of Business Capital in Long-Term Business Survival
1. What are the 8 Business Capital?
The 8 Business Capital are like 8 parts of your life and surroundings. These can help you find a business idea that matches your real life. These are:
» Customer Capital
• People around you who may become your customers.
• Example: Rekha knows many working women in her area who often buy readymade food. This gives her strong customer capital for starting a tiffin service.
» Product Capital
• Your interest in or connection with certain products.
• Example: Rakesh loves making paper bags. He has good product capital to start a small bag-making unit.
» Skills Capital
• The skills you have or can learn easily.
• Example: Suresh has basic computer skills. He can start a small digital service centre.
» Social People Capital
• People who can support or promote your work.
• Example: Maya’s sister runs a tailoring shop. She can send Maya customers for blouse stitching.
» Human Resource Capital
• People available to help in your business.
• Example: Rekha’s brother is jobless and ready to support her new bakery.
» Financial Capital
• The money you can use to start.
• Example: Ramesh can invest ₹15,000 from his savings. He plans to start a natural soap-making business.
» Infrastructure Capital
• Places and tools you already have.
• Example: Sulekha has a small room and old oven. She can use them to start a home bakery.
» Natural Capital
• Natural things around you that help the business.
• Example: Ramu lives in a village with plenty of flowers. He can make herbal products or flower garlands.
How They Help You Find Your Most Suitable Business Idea
When you know your strengths (your business capital), it’s easier to select a business idea that fits you. Let’s see how:
| Step | What to Do | Output | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Step 1: Learn About the 8 Business Capital | Understand each business capital with examples | Clear view of personal strengths | Better awareness about what you already have |
| Step 2: Create Your Business Capital Inventory | Fill a sheet with your available business capital | Personal 8 Business Capital Chart | Know which business types suit you |
| Step 3: Compare With Business Ideas | Match your business capital with business options | List of top ideas that fit you | Save time and effort on wrong business types |
| Step 4: Assess and Shortlist | Use simple tools to compare ideas | Shortlist 3 most suitable ideas | Focused plan for deep research |
| Step 5: Test and Finalize | Try and review the ideas | Final business idea that suits your business capital | Confident and clear path forward |
3. Overview of How This Course Will Work Step-by-Step
This course will guide you like a road-map. You will:
1. Learn the importance of choosing the right business
2. Understand your 8 Business Capital and map them
3. Collect and filter different business ideas
4. Assess each idea using simple tools
5. Validate ideas with market research
6. Select the top 3 business ideas
7. Do financial and practical checks
8. Finalize your most profitable and suitable business idea
9. Prepare a basic business plan to get started
At each step, the 8 Business Capital will be used as a tool to check if the business matches your life, skills, and surroundings.
4. Role of Business Capital in Long-Term Business Survival
Using the 8 Business Capital doesn’t just help in selection — it also helps you survive and grow. Here’s how:
» Customer Capital
Keeps demand strong
» Product Capital
Makes you passionate
» Skills Capital
Helps in quality delivery
» Social People Capital
Brings in regular support and word-of-mouth
» Human Resource Capital
Gives manpower when needed
» Financial Capital
Helps you sustain and grow
» Infrastructure Capital
Reduces startup costs
» Natural Capital
Supports raw material supply or business theme
By using these business capital, your business idea is not based on guesswork but on your real life. That’s why it lasts longer.
» Application
You can now use the 8 Business Capital to start matching yourself with different business ideas. Instead of choosing a business just because it’s popular, you will choose one that you can manage and grow with ease. This method helps you start small and strong. Keep checking your 8 Business Capital as you go ahead in the course. This will be your decision-making guide and safety net.
» Example
Rekha wants to start a business but is confused. Her friend suggested starting a food truck, but she has no cooking skills, no money, and no space. She takes the 8 Business Capital sheet and realizes that she has:
• Strong Social People Capital (many office-going women)
• Some Financial Capital (₹20,000)
• Infrastructure Capital (her home kitchen)
She decides to start a small Tiffin Service instead. Within 3 months, she gets 10 regular customers and earns ₹6000 per month. This business idea matched her real life and strengths.
» Short Assignment
List one example for each of your 8 Business Capital from your own life. Match them with the business ideas you are thinking about. Write which business capital supports which idea. This will help you understand which idea is suitable and which one is not.
» Common Mistakes
• Confusing skill with interest. Solution: Check both Product and Skills Capital separately
• Ignoring Financial Capital. Solution: Always assess what money you actually have
• Taking ideas from others blindly. Solution: Use your own 8 Business Capital to match
• Starting without checking Infrastructure. Solution: Use what you already have to reduce cost
• Forgetting Natural Capital. Solution: Use your local surroundings to support your business
» Summary
This lesson explained the 8 Business Capital that help you find the right business idea. These business capital are your real-life support system and help you make smart decisions. Using them saves time, money, and energy.
Takeaways
• You already have some business capital
• The 8 Business Capital help match you with the right business
• A business based on your life survives longer
• Every step in the course will use these business capital
• These business capital build your confidence and reduce risk
» FAQs
Are these 8 Business Capital needed for all types of businesses?
Yes. Some may matter more than others, but all 8 help in business planning.
What if I have very little Financial Capital?
That’s fine. You can choose low-cost business ideas that match your other strong business capital.
Can my family or friends be part of Social People Capital?
Yes. If they support or promote your work, they are part of this business capital.
I live in a small town. Will my Natural Capital help?
Yes. Plants, climate, raw materials, and even local culture can support some business types.
Do I need to be perfect in all 8 Business Capital?
No. You just need to know your strengths and use them wisely.