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. Refers to items that are received at the store in condition to be put directly on display without any preparation by retail workers
Floor-Ready Merchandise
Reach
Bait-and-Switch Advertising
Niche Retailing
2. Ordering can be computerized and mechanically activated when stock-on-hand reaches the reorder point
Monthly Sales Index
Marketing Research In Retailing
Opportunities
Automatic Reordering System
3. A planned shopping facility - with the largest store being a supermarket or a drugstore
Lifestyles
Neighborhood Shopping Center
Stock-to-Sales Method
Compensation
4. There is more interactive relationship between a franchisor and a franchisee
Horizontal Cooperative Advertising Agreement
Business Format Franchising
Survey
Vertical Price Fixing
5. Consists of products that may have cyclical sales due to changing tastes and lifestyles
Fashion Merchandise
Mass Marketing
Outsourcing
Physical Inventory System
6. Marketplace opening that exist because other retailers have not yet capitalized on them
Opportunities
Open Credit Account
Marketing Research In Retailing
Positioning
7. Includes all the elements in retail offering that encourage or inhibit customers during their contact with a retailer
Culture
Total Retail Experience
Cost of Method Accounting
Inventory Shrinkage
8. A manufacturer-owned store selling closeouts; discontinued merchandise; irregulars; cancelled orders; and - sometimes in-season - first-quality merchandise
Factory Outlet
Routine Decision Making
Electronic Point of Sale System
Destination Retailer
9. The long-run and short-run performance targets a retailers hopes to attain
Destination Retailer
Trading Area Overlap
Customer Service
Objectives
10. Exists when a person regularly patronizes a particular retailer that he or she knows - likes - and trusts
Job Analysis
Employee Empowerment
Department Store
Customer Loyalty
11. A retailer sets prices based on consumer desires; at the top is the demand ceiling - the most that people will pay for a good/service
One-Price Policy
Demand-Oriented Pricing
Wheel of Retailing
Horizontal Cooperative Advertising Agreement
12. A catalog in which a retailer caters to a particular customer segment - emphasizes a limited number of items - and reduces production and postage costs
Independent
Variable Pricing
Specialog
Retail Strategy
13. A retailer wants to maintain a specified ratio of goods on hand to sales
Term Occupancy
Functional Product Groupings
Value Delivery System
Stock-to-Sales Method
14. The customer group sought by a retailer
Post-Purchase Behavior
Mass Merchandising
Target Marketing
Point-of-Purchase Display
15. A computerized - demand-based - variable pricing technique whereby a retailer determines the combination of prices that yield the greatest total revenues for a given period (widely used by airlines and hotels)
Taxes
Yield Management Pricing
Customer Service
Huff's Law of Shopper Attraction
16. A retailer projects the future by studying factors that affect long -run performance and then forms contingency plans based on alternative scenarios
Maintenance-Increase-Recoupment Lease
Huff's Law of Shopper Attraction
Scenario Analysis
Retail Promotion
17. Selection process of one opinion from others. a person determines the criteria to evaluate and their importance before buying
Need-Satisfaction Approach
Evaluation of Alternatives
Markup Pricing
Hierarchy of Effects
18. Permits supermarkets to incorporate aspects of quick response inventory planning - electronic data interchange - and logistics planning
Downsizing
Goal-Oriented Job Description
Gravity Model
Efficient Consumer Response (ECR)
19. Uses a series of mathematical equations showing the association between potential store sales and several independent variables at each location
Constrained Decision Making
Differentiated Marketing
Regression Model
Hierarchy of Authority
20. The reasons for a consumers behavior
Retail Strategy
Rack Display
Destination Retailer
Motives
21. Competition between manufacturers and retailers for shelf space and profits
Cost of Method Accounting
Direct Selling
Demand-Oriented Pricing
Battle of the Brands
22. Contains an additional 15 to 25 percent of a stores customers; located outside of the primary area - and customers are more widely dispersed
Secondary Trading Area
Merchandising
Tactics
Control
23. A freestanding - interactive - electronic computer terminal that displays products and related information on a video screen
Item Price Removal
Video Kiosk
Huff's Law of Shopper Attraction
Factory Outlet
24. 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
Zero-Based Budgeting
Cooperative Buying
Purchase Act
Neighborhood Business District
25. Includes both personal contact with consumers in their homes and phone solicitations initiated by a retailer
Open Credit Account
Manufacturer (national) Brands
Direct Selling
Internal Secondary Data
26. Selling goods and services to a broad spectrum of consumers
Product Life Cycle
Channel Control
Consumer Cooperative
Mass Marketing
27. The overall plan guiding a retail firm
Retail Method of Accounting
Retail Strategy
Incremental Budgeting
Sole Proprietorship
28. A combination store blending an economy supermarket with a discount department store (it is the US version of a hypermarket)
PMs (Promotional or Push Monies)
Fashion Merchandise
Cross-Merchandising
Supercenter
29. A type of research in which one or more elements of a retail strategy mix are manipulated under controlled conditions
Supply Chain
Incremental Budgeting
Geographical Information System
Experiment
30. A retailer clearly defines its promotion goals and prepares a budget to satisfy them. determines the tasks and costs required to achieve that goal (best budgeting method)
Customer Loyalty
Cognitive Dissonance
Objective-and-Task Method
Equal Store Organization
31. Used by retailers that promote seasonally
Liabilities
Massed Promotion Effort
Predatory Pricing
Multi-Channel Retailing
32. A form of revolving account; no interest is assessed if a person pays a bill in full when it is due. when a person makes a partial payment - he or she is assessed interest monthly on the unpaid balance
Full-Line Discount Store
Partnership
Model Stock Approach
Option Credit Account
33. Any communication that fosters a favorable image for the retailer among it publics (consumers - investors - government - channel members - employees - and the general public)
Class Consciousness
Community Shopping Center
Public Relations
Need-Satisfaction Approach
34. Has a primarily functional use: to neatly hang or present products
Rack Display
Solution Selling
Consumer Protection
Exclusive Distribution
35. An inexpensive display that leaves merchandise in the original carton
Retail Life Cycle
Slotting Allowances
Consumer Loyalty (Frequent Shopper) Programs
Cut Case
36. Places displays and aisles in a free-flowing pattern - used for department stores - apparel stores - and other shopping-oriented stores
Hierarchy of Authority
LIFO (last-in-first-out) Method
Curing (Free-Flowing) Traffic Flow
Retail Promotion
37. Exhibits a wide range or merchandise encouraging the customer to feel - look at and/or try on products
Customer Loyalty
Specialty Store
Secondary Trading Area
Assortment Display
38. Mandates that persons with disabilities be given appropriate access to retailing facilities
Weeks' Supply Method
Mass Merchandising
Americans With Disabilities Act
Data Warehousing
39. An area's industrial and commercial structure - the companies and industries that residents depend on to earn a living
Vertical Marketing System
Scenario Analysis
Economic Base
Market Segment Product Groupings
40. A type of retail institution that is a department in a retail store that is rented to an outside party
Neighborhood Shopping Center
Factory Outlet
Robinson-Patman Act
Leased Department
41. A retailers carries complementary goods and services to encourage shoppers to buy more
Word of Mouth (WOM)
Regional Shopping Center
Goal-Oriented Job Description
Cross-Merchandising
42. Used to determine the amount of merchandise to purchase for resale. the goal is to purchase enough of these procuts so they are always in stock
Term Occupancy
Never-Out List
Category Management
Vendor-Managed Inventory (VMI)
43. A type of retail institution in which a retailers owns one retail unit
LIFO (last-in-first-out) Method
Stock Turnover
Independent
Primary Data
44. A retailers starts with its total available store space - divides the space into categories - and then works on product layouts
Issue (problem) Definition
Primary Data
Ethics
Top-Down Space Management Approach
45. 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
Lifestyle Center
Hierarchy of Effects
Sorting Process
Basic Stock List
46. Used by retailers that promote throughout the year
Specialty Store
Category Killer
Cross-Merchandising
Distributed Promotion Effort
47. Whereby copies of all the data bases in a firm are maintained in one location and are accessible to employees at any locale
Dead Areas
Retail Institution
Data Warehousing
Uncontrollable Variables
48. A retailer tied it promotion budge to revenue and develops a promotion to sales ratio
Generic Brands
Percentage-of-Sales Method
Stock-to-Sales Method
Prestige Pricing
49. The firms particular combination of store location - operating procedures - goods/services offered - pricing tactics - store atmosphere and customer services - and promotional methods
Micromerchandising
Semantic Differential
Strategy Mix
Prestige Pricing
50. Large retailers seek to reduce competition by selling goods and services at very low prices - thus causing small retailers to go out of business
Distributed Promotion Effort
Predatory Pricing
Direct Selling
Stimulus