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Q:
The manufacturer of Cutco knives uses students as salespeople. The salespeople go into customers' homes and demonstrate the product and the sales transactions usually occur in a home setting. This form of nonstore retailing is called:
a. direct retailing
b. personal marketing
c. direct marketing
d. automatic vending
e. electronic retailing
Q:
Which type of retailing is the selling of products by representatives who work door-to-door, office-to-office, or at home parties?
a. personal marketing
b. remote retailing
c. direct retailing
d. off-site retailing
e. primary retailing
Q:
_____ is a low-profile, yet important, form of retailing in which consumers get products out of automated machines, and it accounts for $40 billion worth of sales each year in the United States.
a. Automatic vending
b. Party-plan selling
c. Direct marketing
d. A pyramid scheme
e. Professional selling
Q:
Which of the following statements about nonstore retailing is true?
a. The nature of the communications between the retailer and the customer is the same in all forms of nonstore retailing.
b. Nonstore retailing is currently growing faster than in-store retailing.
c. More than 80 percent of all sales are made through nonstore retailing.
d. The high growth rate for nonstore retailing is due to the growth of TV home shopping.
e. Nonstore retailing is increasing at a rate lower than in-store retailing.
Q:
_____ refers to shopping without visiting a store and is currently growing faster than in-store shopping because of the consumer demand for convenience.
a. Nonstore retailing
b. Customerization
c. Hypershopping
d. Niche marketing
e. Specialty merchandising
Q:
Which of the following statements about restaurants is true?
a. Restaurants are clearly a retailing establishment.
b. There is a strong demand for many more restaurants.
c. The demographic issue of time-poor consumers has led to a growing demand for restaurants.
d. Because barriers to entry are low, the restaurant business appeals to many people.
e. Restaurants are clearly a service industry.
Q:
Well-known manufacturers such as Nike, Liz Claiborne, and Mikasa have decided the most profitable way to dispose of out-of-season and irregular stock is to open stores and sell their own merchandise. These stores are types of:
a. seasonal outlets
b. mass merchandisers
c. factory outlets
d. discount stores
e. bargain basements
Q:
Well-known manufacturers such as Bose, Ralph Lauren, and Reebok have decided the most profitable way to dispose of out-of-season and irregular stock is to open stores and sell their own merchandise. These stores are types of:
a. seasonal outlets
b. mass merchandisers
c. factory outlets
d. discount stores
e. bargain basements
Q:
A _____ is an off-price retailer that is owned and operated by a manufacturer and carries one line of merchandise--its own.
a. mass merchandiser
b. factory outlet
c. wholesale club
d. discount store
e. bargain basement store
Q:
A publisher of books on holiday decorating, cooking, and crafts has to find a way to dispose of its overrun and unsold end-of-season output. As a marketing consultant, you suggest the firm sell the merchandise to:
a. mass merchandisers
b. convenience stores
c. department stores
d. supermarkets
e. off-price discount retailers
Q:
Off-price retailers:
a. are often able to take advantage of manufacturers' faulty sales forecasting
b. very often offer a consistent assortment of merchandise
c. seldom stock brand-name merchandise
d. are owned by the manufacturer of the products they sell
e. offer very deep assortments
Q:
Laura buys supplies for her catering business at a retailer that stocks a limited selection of items, which are sold in bulk on a cash-and-carry basis to members only. As she browses through a huge store, she buys flour, a set of muffin pans, and a package of paper towels as well as an assortment of fresh produce. Laura is most likely shopping at a(n):
a. off-price discount retailer
b. factory outlet
c. industrial supply warehouse
d. warehouse membership club
e. wholesale outlet
Q:
Katie buys supplies for her consulting business at a retailer that stocks a limited selection of items, which are sold in bulk on a cash-and-carry basis to members only. As she browses through a huge store, she buys flour, a set of muffin pans, and a package of paper towels as well as an assortment of fresh produce. Katie is most likely shopping at a(n):
a. off-price discount retailer
b. factory outlet
c. industrial supply warehouse
d. warehouse membership club
e. wholesale outlet
Q:
_____ sell a limited selection of brand-name appliances, household items, and groceries, usually in bulk on a cash-and-carry basis to members only.
a. Super outlets
b. Factory outlets
c. Wholesale discounters
d. Off-price discount retailers
e. Warehouse membership clubs
Q:
Specialty stores such as Best Buy, Babies R Us, and Bed, Bath, and Beyond are often called category killers because:
a. they can destroy the profit potential for a category of merchandise for other retailers
b. they are located at stand-alone sites
c. of their broad merchandise mix and shallow assortment
d. they offer an exclusive category of merchandise
e. they carry only fast-selling items
Q:
Glen's Safety First! sells a huge assortment of firefighting equipment at greatly reduced prices. It offers customers few services and competes on the basis of moderate to low prices on the large quantities of merchandise it stocks. Glen's Safety First! is an example of a:
a. full-line discount store
b. specialty discount store
c. general store
d. department store
e. wholesale store
Q:
_____ are single-line stores that offer a nearly complete selection of one line of merchandise and use self-service, discount prices, high volume, and high turnover of merchandise to their advantage.
a. Specialty discount stores
b. Factory outlets
c. Mass merchandisers
d. Membership clubs
e. General stores
Q:
Which of the following groups is most likely to be the target market for extreme-value retailers?
a. teenagers
b. professionals who like bargains
c. Asian Americans
d. middle-class innovators
e. people who have fixed or low incomes
Q:
_____ are full-line discount, off-price retailers who entice the low- and fixed-income customers who live near the stores.
a. Membership wholesale clubs
b. Extreme-value retailers
c. Factory outlets
d. Neighborhood outlets
e. Category killers
Q:
A retail operation that has a 90,000-square-foot facility, that houses a florist, baker, bank, craft shop, photo finisher, dry cleaner, and pharmacy under the same roof as grocery and household items is correctly called a:
a. membership warehouse club
b. wholesale outlet
c. factory outlet
d. supercenter
e. mass merchandiser
Q:
Kmart utilizes a strategy of moderate to low prices on large quantities of products and lower levels of service to stimulate a high turnover of inventory. Kmart offers a wide variety of different product lines. Kmart is an example of a:
a. factory outlet
b. mass merchandiser
c. convenience store
d. franchising operation
e. specialty store
Q:
_____ is the retailing strategy of using moderate to low prices on large quantities of products and lower service to stimulate a high turnover of inventory.
a. Specialty store positioning
b. Merchandise positioning
c. M-store retailing
d. The wheel of retailing
e. Mass merchandising
Q:
Which type of discount store offers consumers very limited service and carries a broad assortment of nationally branded hard goods, such as housewares, toys, automotive parts, clothing, bedding, and maybe a limited line of nonperishable food items?
a. full-line discount stores
b. discount specialty stores
c. factory outlets
d. fashion stores
e. specialty supercenters
Q:
Discount stores:
a. compete on the basis of low prices, high turnover, and high volume
b. offer more SKUs than department stores
c. sell high-priced, low-turnover products
d. provide their customers with full service
e. compete on the basis of assortment and depth
Q:
_____ are retailers that compete on the basis of low prices, high turnover, and high volume.
a. Convenience outlets
b. Discount stores
c. General stores
d. Department stores
e. Specialty stores
Q:
Flash Foods is the name of a chain of convenience stores with self-service gas pumps. What do you know about the convenience stores?
a. They carry a wide assortment of products
b. They carry a limited line of high-turnover goods
c. They compete on the basis of low price
d. They carry a limited but deep assortment of products
e. They carry the freshest of produce
Q:
Prices are usually higher in convenience stores than in supermarkets because convenience stores offer:
a. more specialty goods
b. a wider variety of products
c. a higher level of customer services
d. better location, longer hours, and faster service
e. higher quality goods
Q:
_____ carry a limited line of high-turnover, high-priced goods and resemble miniature supermarkets. These self-service stores are typically located near residential areas and are open long hours, seven days a week.
a. Specialty stores
b. Wholesale stores
c. Convenience stores
d. Factory outlets
e. General stores
Q:
Safeway, Avanza (for the Hispanic market), Publix, and other supermarket chains offer a variety of nontraditional goods and services such as video rental, flower shops, dry cleaning, and banking. This practice is called:
a. convenience merchandising
b. retail wheeling
c. specialty service
d. trade-up positioning
e. scrambled merchandising
Q:
Kroger is the second largest supermarket chain in the U.S. Which of the following is the most likely reason why Kroger supermarkets sell all types of foodstuffs as well as nonfood products including a wide range of eyewear and accessories?
a. consumer demand for one-stop shopping often leads to scrambled merchandising
b. the fulfillment of the wheel of retailing hypothesis
c. inflationary economic climate
d. repositioning as a discounter
e. growth of convenience merchandising
Q:
When supermarkets offer a wide variety of nontraditional goods and services under one roof, they are engaged in:
a. cross-selling
b. trading up
c. scrambled merchandising
d. disintermediation
e. cross-docking
Q:
Giant Eagle is a chain of retail outlets in Ohio, West Virginia, Maryland, and Pennsylvania markets that are described as large, departmentalized, self-service stores that specialize in wide assortments of foodstuffs and limited nonfood items. Giant Eagle stores are:
a. off-price retailers
b. discount stores
c. wholesale clubs
d. convenience stores
e. supermarkets
Q:
_____ are large, departmentalized, self-service retailers that specialize in wide assortments of foodstuffs and a few nonfood items.
a. Supermarkets
b. Convenience stores
c. Membership wholesale clubs
d. Discount stores
e. Assortment merchandisers
Q:
Which of the following statements about specialty stores is true?
a. Customers usually consider price to be the most important factor in their selection of a specialty store.
b. Customers at specialty stores are not concerned with the distinctiveness of the merchandise or the store's physical appearance.
c. Specialty stores typically avoid price wars.
d. Specialty stores are ineffective test markets.
e. A typical specialty store carries a wider assortment of specialty merchandise than department stores.
Q:
Which of the following types of stores has a high gross margin, a narrow product assortment, and a high level of service?
a. supermarket
b. warehouse club
c. convenience store
d. full-line discount store
e. specialty store
Q:
Texas-based Grape Vine Market is an 18,000-square-foot store offering highly collectible food and winealong with some other culinary perks, including a cooking schoolall in a setting crafted to make shoppers feel comfortable. It stocks more than 5,500 different kinds of wine. Grape Vine Market is best described as a:
a. hypermarket
b. convenience store
c. specialty store
d. department store
e. general store
Q:
James wants to open a small store that offers only products, knowledge and advice for those who like to build Hot Rods, Street Rods, and refurbish classic cars. Which of the following types of stores would most likely support an effective launch of his business idea?
a. off-price retailer
b. specialty store
c. full-discount store
d. general store
e. warehouse club
Q:
Which type of retail store specializes in a given type of merchandise?
a. independent store
b. department store
c. discount store
d. specialty store
e. first-level store
Q:
The _____ at John Lewis, Britain's largest department store chain, selects the merchandise for his or her department and is often responsible for its promotion and for managing the personnel in that department.
a. buyer
b. purchasing agent
c. retail broker
d. merchandiser
e. franchisee
Q:
The buyer who heads a department in a department store is responsible for the:
a. store's exchange and return policies
b. store's credit policies
c. chain's expansion efforts
d. merchandise mix in that department
e. store's advertising program
Q:
Each department in a department store is usually headed by a _____ who selects the merchandise mix for the department and may also choose the promotional devices and personnel for that department.
a. franchisee
b. financial broker
c. comptroller
d. human resources manager
e. buyer
Q:
Which type of retail store would typically have the highest labor costs?
a. warehouse club
b. department store
c. off-price store
d. off-price retailer
e. discount store
Q:
Housing several departments under one roof, a _____ carries a wide variety of shopping and specialty goods and provides a high level of service.
a. supermarket
b. specialty store
c. convenience store
d. super club
e. department store
Q:
As a general rule of thumb, a retailer that has a high gross margin will have:
a. m-commerce capabilities
b. an inventory management system
c. low prices
d. salespeople trained in cross-selling techniques
e. high prices
Q:
_____ shows how much the retailer makes as a percentage of sales after the cost of goods sold is subtracted.
a. Net income
b. Retained earnings
c. Profitability
d. Net equity
e. Gross margin
Q:
The number of different varieties of fishing lures carried by the Angler's Store refers to the store's:
a. store's supply standard
b. complete retail offering
c. retail mix
d. volume
e. assortment depth
Q:
Rick owns and operates his own UPS shipping store. He has licensed the right to use UPS's business systems. Rick's shipping store is a:
a. doubly managed outlet
b. chain store
c. franchise
d. independent retailer
e. licensor
Q:
Which type of retail ownership is owned and operated by an individual but is licensed by a larger supporting organization?
a. independent retailer
b. chain store
c. franchise
d. cooperative
e. secondary retailer
Q:
Retail stores that are owned and operated as a group by a single organization are called _____. Under this form of ownership, administrative and purchasing tasks are handled by the home office.
a. home base stores
b. independent retailers
c. franchisees
d. chain stores
e. strip centers
Q:
Tiffany owns a gift shop that carries clothing and memorabilia of local high school teams as well as home decor objects. She is the sole owner of the store, so in terms of ownership, her store would be classified as a(n):
a. independent retailer
b. free-standing store
c. franchise
d. chain store
e. common retailer
Q:
Small neighborhood florists, shoe stores, and ethnic food markets are most likely to be:
a. supercenters
b. franchise outlets
c. membership clubs
d. chain stores
e. independent retailers
Q:
Around the world, most retailers are _____, operating one or a few stores in their community, owned by a single person or partnership and not operated as part of a larger retail institution.
a. independent retailers
b. chain stores
c. franchise outlets
d. specialty clubs
e. product assortment stores
Q:
A retail store can be classified according to its:
a. distribution method
b. inventory control
c. product assortment
d. management style
e. decor and atmosphere
Q:
Retail establishments are generally classified according to all of the following EXCEPT:
a. ownership
b. level of sales
c. level of service
d. price
e. product assortment
Q:
Which U.S. retailer is the number one sales volume retailer in the world?
a. Sears
b. JCPenney
c. Target
d. Kroger
e. Wal-Mart
Q:
_____ is defined as all activities directly related to the sale of goods and services to the ultimate consumer for personal, nonbusiness use or consumption.a. Wholesalingb. Retailingc. Businessd. Franchisinge. Distribution
Q:
Every October through December, Hickory Farms opens a temporary store in many malls to sell products during the Christmas season without the long-term commitment of a more expensive retail lease. This is an example of a pop-up shop.
Q:
M-commerce is a type of managed commerce in which both buyer and seller end the transaction with a win-win feeling.
Q:
Interactivity in the retail environment is not feasible in terms of its costs.
Q:
Providing great customer service is one of the most challenging elements in the retail mix because customer expectations for service are so varied.
Q:
Color can be used by retailers to create a mood or focus customer attention on a particular product.
Q:
A store's atmosphere is the overall impression conveyed by a store's physical layout, decor, and surroundings.
Q:
Pick of the Litter has just purchased a sizable plot of land on which it will build a store building with a large parking lot. Across the street is a collection of specialty shops and a furniture store. Pick of the Litter will be part of a strip shopping center.
Q:
The six Ps of the retailing mix are product, place, price, promotion, personnel, and planning.
Q:
The two types of franchising are target market franchising and geographic franchising.
Q:
Electronic retailing includes the 24 hour, shop-at-home television networks and online retailing.
Q:
The person who called Alisa last night and tried to sell her double-paned windows for her homewas using inbound telemarketing.
Q:
Direct retailers' sales have suffered as women have entered the workforce.
Q:
Marketers who use nonstore retailing no longer have to worry about the "place" element of the four Ps.
Q:
Factory outlet stores are generally the same as warehouse clubs, except that a factory outlet store carries only the merchandise of the manufacturer that owns it.
Q:
Off-price retailers differ from other discount stores in the merchandise they carry. While most other discounters offer a predictable assortment of merchandise, the styles and brands offered at off-price retailers change frequently because they buy only what is currently available at a good deal.
Q:
Specialty discount stores are often called category killers because they dominate the competition in their narrow merchandise segment.
Q:
Supercenters are more than just larger versions of traditional "markets." In addition to foodstuffs, supercenters have pharmacies, dry cleaners, portrait studies, photo finishing, hair salons, and restaurants.
Q:
Flash Foods is the name of a chain of small stores, which carry high-turnover products such as lip balm, milk, soda, beer, bread, and aspirin. Flash Foods stores are open all day every day and would best be classified as convenience stores.
Q:
A typical discount store competes by carrying a limited line of high-turnover, high-margin goods.
Q:
Jennifer owns a greeting card store where she also sells women's purses, crocs for the whole family, jibbitz, cell phone skins, Sandy Lion stickers, Yankee candles, Godiva chocolates, Precious Memories figurines, beaded jewelry, and stuffed animals. Jennifer uses multibrand merchandising.
Q:
Supermarkets are self-service retailers that specialize in food and food products although many now carry nonfood items as well.
Q:
Emily has just opened a health food store that sells organic foods, herbal supplements, and environmentally-friendly products. Because it will be a specialty store, she should have a broad product assortment with moderately low prices.
Q:
A retailing establishment that sells a wide variety of shopping and specialty goods, including apparel, cosmetics, housewares, and electronics would be classified as a department store.
Q:
A retail establishment can be classified according to its ownership, level of service, product assortment, and price.