ABOUT ECONOMIC LANDSCAPES
An Economic Landscape provides a well organised view of the quantifiable factors describing a business’s impact on it’s enterprise environment. Both now and after changes it could make next.
The view achieves this by setting out:
- How the business is situated within it’s state’s enterprise environment
- The business’s geography and responsible officers
- The goals and objectives given to officers related to which state entities
- The operational processes designed to achieve the goals and objectives
- The common classes and families of activity making the processes up
- The distribution of economic factors across operational activity now
- The economic impacts of changing how such activity could be done next
Economic Landscapes are derived from, and exactly align with, Business Landscapes. They decomposes a business into common operational components and their economic significance.
An economic landscape uses model narratives to articulate how each operational component is done now, how it could be done next, a set of intervening changes, and their economic impact.
Economic Landscapes can articulate impacts at high, medium and low levels of granularity, catering for all scenarios and circumstances faced by users populating them.
An economic landscape reveals which business component has what effect on which economic outcome.
VALUATION OFFICE ECONOMIC LANDSCAPE

The Valuation Office is part of a public sector enterprise. The business produces real property valuation products and services, for taxation and housing purposes. See Landscape →