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Test your basic knowledge |
Management 101: Business History
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Study First
Subject
:
business-skills
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. Use of stock tender to offer to buy a company that did not want to sell.
Montgomery Ward
Hostile Takeover
Civil War
Anti-trust Policy
2. Transportation. Airline Act. Rail Act. Motor Carrier Act.
Deregulation
Disposable Income
Currency
Henry Ford
3. Partnership between business and government. Solve problems through scientific investigation. Society of Harmony
Horizontal Integration
Corporation
Closed Shop
Welfare Capitalism
4. GM - Ford - and Chrysler dominated the market. GM=50% share
Frederick Taylor
Economic Prosperity
Marshall Plan
Booming American Automobile Industry
5. Purchases right to do business and usually pays a franchise fee plus royalty fee based on sales.
Conglomerates
Franchisee
Disposable Income
Corporation
6. Formalized business practices by standardized management practices.
Progressivism
Sears
Gilded Age
Managerial Revolution
7. Employers can hire whoever they want. Both union and non union.
Franklin Roosevelt
Open Shop
Mann-Elkins Act
Henry Ford
8. Increase consumer durables; increase service industries; trade - finance - transportation - and gov't
The Great Depression
Post-Industrial Economy
Civil Rights Act
Franklin Roosevelt
9. Father of Scientific Management. Studied individual tasks to make them more efficient. Used a stop watch to measure time it takes to complete a task.
University of PA
Frederick Taylor
Marketing
Vertical Integration
10. Workers would enjoy the rights of association and the ability to influence wage levels.
Industrial Democracy
Laissez Faire
Taft Hartley Act
Deregulation
11. Business - not independent trade unions should look after the best interest of the workers.
Sears
Closed Shop
Welfare Capitalism
Corporatism
12. Interstate Commerce Commission was strengthened. Regulated rates.
The Great Depression
Hepburn Act
Sears
Employment & Production Act
13. Management could hire whomever they wanted but after a period of time. All workers had to join the union.
Open Shop
Business Bureaucracies
Welfare Capitalism
Union Shop
14. Setting of the firms strategy according to realistic observations of available customers and then organizing the firm to coordinate production - distribution - sales and service according to these observations.
Marketing
Post-Industrial Economy
Salmon Chase
Industrial Policy
15. Set of attitudes and values that optimistically looked toward the erection of new institutions through which Americans would realize the good society.
Herbert Hoover
Progressivism
Populism
Sears
16. Unsafe at any speed. Consumers should not automatically trust new products or the business that produced them.
Populism
Consequences of Mergers
Ralph Nader
Marshall Plan
17. Most favored nation. Trade barriers raised.
Franchisee
Associative State
Ralph Nader
Trade
18. Panic of 1907 - 5 members - foreign transactions went through NY.
1913 Federal Reserve Board
Mass Industry
Mircosoft
Managerial Revolution
19. Ultimate authority of nations economic well being shifted from private arena - to public arena.
Administrative pricing
John D. Rockafeller
Employment & Production Act
Green Backs
20. Companies with many different divisions - usually 8 or more that make up and sell unrelated products.
Conglomerates
Corporatism
Andrew Carnegie
Employment & Production Act
21. First college of business.
Gilded Age
Open Prices
Most Favorited Nation
University of PA
22. 1901 Mark Twain - referes to substantial growth in population in the united states and extravagant displays of wealth and excess of Americas upper class
Francis Kellor
1913 Federal Reserve Board
Corporate Management
Gilded Age
23. Could only hire union workers. Illegal
Business Bureaucracies
Consumer Durables
Closed Shop
U.S Chamber of Commerce
24. Promote economic recovery in Europe.
Marshall Plan
Corporatism
Franchisee
Trade
25. Oil supplies withheld; large - non fuel efficient car; More japanese cars sold; Ford - Chevy - Chrysler
Industrial Policy
Francis Kellor
Employment & Production Act
Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries
26. Retailer - mail-order companies. Name brand products - advertising - catalogs.
Mass Industry
Hepburn Act
Keynes Economic Theory
Populism
27. Paper currency issued by the government to finance to civil war.
John D. Rockafeller
Green Backs
Sherman Anti-Trust Act
Andrew Carnegie
28. Trade associations fixed prices and thwarted competition in the interest of maximum efficiency.
Industrial Democracy
Open Prices
Henry Ford
Union Shop
29. President. Standard oil - american tobacco - us steel.
William Taft
Associative State
Franchisee
Mircosoft
30. Items purchased by consumers for use over more than a year or two.
Economic Prosperity
Consumer Durables
Franklin Roosevelt
Decentralized Management
31. Burden of proof to raise rates was now the responsibility of the railroads.
Vertical Integration
Salmon Chase
Mann-Elkins Act
Anti-trust Policy
32. Sears.
Laissez Faire
Anti-trust Policy
Montgomery Ward
Richard T. Ely
33. President;FDIC;Closed all banks on first day in office;only president to serve four terms.
Economic Prosperity
Franklin Roosevelt
Mircosoft
Francis Kellor
34. Started as a gun powder company - Rate of return.
Du Pont
Keynes Economic Theory
Most Favorited Nation
Functional Departmentalization
35. Oil refining business. He was the first billionaire.
Administrative pricing
John D. Rockafeller
U.S Chamber of Commerce
Associative State
36. Background in railroad business. 1872 entered steel business. Sold to JP Morgan for $480 million dollars.
Open Shop
Andrew Carnegie
Henry Ford
Disposable Income
37. Corporate offices
Decentralized Management
Military Industrial Complex
Managerial Revolution
Conglomerates
38. Business leaders sought to achieve cooperation among business - labor and government.
Vertical Integration
Consumerism
Corporatism
Booming American Automobile Industry
39. Leader of the new school economists. Rejected Laissez faire. Did not believe in government run business.
Currency
Associative State
U.S Chamber of Commerce
Richard T. Ely
40. Cooperative activity in the service of the public - exchanging information - eliminating waste - fostering labor management to improve the business system.
Oligopoly
New Individualism
Trade
Francis Kellor
41. American firms were poised to dominate economic activity in a system of free trade.
Ralph Nader
Economic Prosperity
NAFTA
Franklin Roosevelt
42. Set of values that placed a higher priority on the use of good than on their production.
1913 Federal Reserve Board
William Taft
Consequences of Mergers
Consumerism
43. Free trade between US - Canada - Mexico
Andrew Carnegie
Most Favorited Nation
Populism
NAFTA
44. Sec. of Treasury under lincoln. Father of national Banking system.
Administrative pricing
Salmon Chase
Marketing
Managerial Revolution
45. Income people could do with as the pleased.
Consumer Durables
Post-Industrial Economy
Disposable Income
Consumerism
46. Use borrowed money to buy company. Sometimes used to take 'stock private'
1913 Federal Reserve Board
Bill Gates - Paul Allen
Anti-trust Policy
Leveraged Buyout
47. Worked divided by specific tasks. i.e. accounting - production - ect.
Functional Departmentalization
Anti-trust Policy
Green Backs
Vertical Integration
48. Gold drain; exchange rates; free floating
Associative State
Currency
Employment & Production Act
Laissez Faire
49. Outlawed racial and gender discrimination; created equal employment opportunity; affected hiring; job security.
Henry Ford
Horizontal Integration
Sherman Anti-Trust Act
Civil Rights Act
50. Reduction in diversification. Reduction in layers of management.
Consequences of Mergers
Progressivism
Corporatism
Richard T. Ely