You build a company competing with Texas Instruments, Hewlett-Packard, Tandy and Apple. You are in 1988 and all competing to corner the market on the new innovative Pet-Bot. You start off slow with only a few responsibilities which include pricing, advertising, and determining the amount to produce for the year.
As your company grows the tasks get harder. You go on to new levels in the company from startup to growth in growth you gain the ability to build a warehouse. You can sell stock in your company, take out long term bonds or short term loans.
You build a company competing with Texas Instruments, Hewlett-Packard, Tandy and Apple. You are in 1988 and all competing to corner the market on the new innovative Pet-Bot. You start off slow with only a few responsibilities which include pricing, advertising, and determining the amount to produce for the year.
As your company grows the tasks get harder. You go on to new levels in the company from startup to growth in growth you gain the ability to build a warehouse. You can sell stock in your company, take out long term bonds or short term loans. Then you proceed into independence, you can hire sales people determine commission and how many sells on credit, also you can now fund new projects in the
research and development department . Then new products stage now try to corner the market on not only the Pet-Bot but the new Sentry Bot and House Bot as well.
It’s a race to get the products on the shelves. But wait, the next level is new marketplaces. Now you sell not just locally but you have East Coast, West Coast and Canada. You have to decide what price to sell you nifty products at how much to spend on advertising, how many salespeople to have there commission and credit for three areas instead of your regular one Competition gets harder and decisions more complex. Space gets tight you need a bigger warehouse.
You’re taking out loans. Production goes up prices go down. Be careful because one wrong move can cost you the company. What can I say except me and uncle Sam had a bit of a disagreement on where my money should go and well, I lost. Test you business sense. See how you would do as a technology giant. A game that lets you put yourself to the test.
Fortunately if things go bad you won’t find yourself in a cardboard box. You can always retire and give it another go. I think I’m going to stick to my regular nine to five. This stuff just seems to much like WORK. The game is easy to use and screens are easy to navigate.