SUBJECTS
|
BROWSE
|
CAREER CENTER
|
POPULAR
|
JOIN
|
LOGIN
Business Skills
|
Soft Skills
|
Basic Literacy
|
Certifications
About
|
Help
|
Privacy
|
Terms
|
Email
Search
Test your basic knowledge |
Retail Management
Start Test
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. Retailers become active in businesses outside their normal operations - and add stores in different goods/service categories
Box (Limited-Line) Store
Diversification
Destination Retailer
Yield Management Pricing
2. Environmental and marketplace factors that can adversely affect retailers if they do not react to them
Lifestyle Center
Threats
Independent
Retail Strategy
3. A retailer projects the future by studying factors that affect long -run performance and then forms contingency plans based on alternative scenarios
Application Blank
Category Killer
Scenario Analysis
Vertical Retail Audit
4. Money left after paying taxes and buying necessities
Discretionary income
Ease of Entry
Order-Getting Salesperson
Demand-Oriented Pricing
5. the drive within people to attain work-related goals - can be positive or negative
Job Motivation
Leased Department
Primary Trading Area
Tactics
6. Occurs when the value and customer services provided through a retailing experience meet or exceed consumer expectations
Customer Satisfaction
Price Elasticity of Demand
Lifestyles
Economic Base
7. Selling merchandise at a limited range of price point - with each point representing a distinct level of quality
Revolving Credit Account
Horizontal Retail Audit
Price Lining
Zero-Based Budgeting
8. The sum total of an individuals traits - which make that individual unique
Revolving Credit Account
Personality
Vertical Cooperative Advertising Agreement
Membership (Warehouse) Club
9. Whereby retailers seek to establish and maintain long-term bonds with customers - rather than act as if each sales transaction is completely new encounter
Fad Merchandise
Relationship Retailing
Situation Analysis
Owned-Goods Services
10. The cost to the retailer of each item recorded on an accounting sheet and/or is coded on a price tag or merchandise container
Limited Decision Making
Cost of Method Accounting
Nongoods Services
Analog Model
11. The logistics aspect of a value delivery chain. it compromises all the parties that participate in the retail logistics process: manufacturers - wholesalers - third-party specialists and the retailers
Storefront
Horizontal Retail Audit
Supply Chain
Mystery Shoppers
12. The possible benefits a retailer forgoes if it invests in one opportunity rather than another
Inventory Management
Organization Chart
Functional Product Groupings
Opportunity Costs
13. Whereby special tags are attached to products so that the tags can be sensed by electronic security devices at store exits
Electronic Article Surveillance
Geographical Information System
Supervision
Category Management
14. The total physical exterior of the store itself - marquee - entrances - windows - lighting - and construction materials
Lifestyles
Storefront
Cooperative Buying
Secondary Trading Area
15. Whereby the retailer sets standards and measures its performance based on the achievements of its sector of retailing - specific competitors - high-performance firms - and/or the prior actions of the firm itself
Retail Information System
Logistics
Benchmarking
Scenario Analysis
16. An exchange of money or a promise to pay for the ownership or use of a good or service. three factors: place of purchase - purchase terms and availability
Demographics
Retail Institution
Computerized Checkout
Purchase Act
17. A food-based discounter that focuses on a small selection of items - moderate hours of operation - few services and limited manufacturer brands
Box (Limited-Line) Store
External Secondary Data
Retail Method of Accounting
Cross-Merchandising
18. A retailer first allots funds for each element of the retail strategy mix except promotion. the remaining funds go to promotion (weakest strategy)
Employee Empowerment
Personal Selling
All-You-Can-Afford Method
Concentrated Marketing
19. Encompasses the paid communication activities other than advertising - public relations and personal selling that stimulate consumer purchases and dealer effectiveness
Odd Pricing
Percentage-of-Sales Method
Sales Promotion
Balanced Tenancy
20. A visual (graphical) representation of the space for selling - merchandise - personnel and customers - as well as for product categories which lays out the in-store placement
Planogram
Monthly Sales Index
Chargebacks
Mergers
21. A planned shopping facility - with the largest store being a supermarket or a drugstore
Retail Strategy
Cooperative Buying
Data-Base Retailing
Neighborhood Shopping Center
22. An unincorporated retail firm owned by two or more persons - each with a financial interest
Scrambled Merchandising
Partnership
One-Price Policy
Simulation
23. A retailers has no risk because title is not taken; the supplier owns the goods until sold
Solution Selling
Consignment Purchase
Traditional Job Description
Top-Down Space Management Approach
24. Lower price than the original is used to meet the lower price of another retailer - adapt to inventory overstocking - clear out shopworn merchandise - reduce assortments of odds and ends - and increase customer traffic
Markdown
Retail Audit
Intensive Distribution
Situation Analysis
25. A retail firm that is formally incorporated under state law
Corporation
Neighborhood Business District
Product Life Cycle
Benchmarking
26. Available from sources outside the firm
External Secondary Data
Storability Product Groupings
Channel of Distribution
Liabilities
27. Retail prices are set at levels below even dollar values; the assumption is that people feel these prices represent discounts or that the amounts are beneath consumer price ceilings
Odd Pricing
Rack Display
Scenario Analysis
Supply Chain
28. Mazur plan derivative in which buying is centralized and branches become sales units with equal operational status
Equal Store Organization
Affinity
Variable Pricing
Classification Merchandising
29. Retailers and suppliers regularly exchange information through their computers with regard to inventory levels - delivery times - unit sales and so on of a particular item
Hidden Assets
Data Mining
Memorandum Purchase
Electronic Data Interchange (EDI)
30. A multi-line firm operating under central ownership
Item Price Removal
Merchandising
Diversified Retailer
Opportunity Costs
31. Relates to the quantites of merchandise a retailer handles during a stated period
Taxes
Culture
Unit Control
Option Credit Account
32. Involves an informal ranking of people based on income - occupation - education and other factors
Data Mining
Extended Decision Making
Mass Merchandising
Social Class
33. Feature brand-name apparel and accessories - footwear - linens - fabrics - cosmetics - and/or housewares and sells them at everyday low prices in an efficient - limited-service environment
Relationship Retailing
Niche Retailing
Personal Selling
Off-Price Chain
34. Contains an additional 15 to 25 percent of a stores customers; located outside of the primary area - and customers are more widely dispersed
Customer Loyalty
Never-Out List
Secondary Trading Area
Application Blank
35. The criteria used to assess effectiveness
Staple Merchandise
Performance Measures
Value (customer)
Motives
36. All of the businesses and people involved in the physical movement and transfer of ownership of goods and services from producer to consumer
Channel of Distribution
Cost-Oriented Pricing
Retail Institution
Information Search
37. Information is systematically gathered from respondents by communicating with them
Multi-Channel Retailing
Survey
Personality
Merchandising
38. The overall plan guiding a retail firm
Retail Strategy
Purchase Motivation Product Groupings
Basic Stock List
Stock-to-Sales Method
39. When information is amassed on each job's functions and requirements: duties - responsibilities - aptitude - interest - education - experience - and physical tasks
Routine Decision Making
Job Analysis
Generic Brands
Visual Merchandising
40. The reasons for a consumers behavior
Retail Promotion
Post-Purchase Behavior
Motives
Control
41. Represents the total bundle of benefits offered to consumers through a channel of distribution
Bottom-Up Space Management Approach
Percentage-of-Sales Method
Value Chain
Experiential Merchandising
42. The difference between net sales and the cost of goods sold; it consists of operating expenses plus net profit
Internet
Marketing Research In Retailing
Gross Profit (margin)
Positioning
43. Closing inventory value is determined by calculating the average relationship between the cost and retail values of merchandise available for sale during a period
Retail Method of Accounting
Massed Promotion Effort
Purchase Motivation Product Groupings
Positioning
44. Involves the retailers collecting an assortment of goods and services from various sources - buying them in large quantity - and offering to sell them in small quantities to consumers
Sorting Process
Robinson-Patman Act
Positioning
Retail Information System
45. Shipping goods right from suppliers to individual stores. workds best with retailers who utilize EDI
Direct Store Distribution (DSD)
Cost of Method Accounting
Basic Stock List
Chargebacks
46. Zeroing in on one specific group
HRM Process
Concentrated Marketing
Outshopping
Lifestyle Center
47. Focuses on the sale of tangible phoducts
RFID (radio frequency identification)
Performance Measures
Goods Retailing
Staple Merchandise
48. Theory that retail innovators often first appear as low-price operators with low costs and low profit margin requirements
Selective Distribution
Private (dealer) Brands
Fringe Trading Area
Wheel of Retailing
49. Products are marked with a series of thick and thin vertical lines - representing each item's identification code
Convenience Store
Universal Product Code (UPC)
Relationship Retailing
Performance Measures
50. Involves the activities of government - businesses - and other organizations to protect people from practices infringing upon their rights as consumers
Cost of Method Accounting
Consumer Protection
Cooperative Advertising
Threats