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Marketing
Q:
_____ is the efficient and cost-effective forward and reverse flow and storage of goods, services, and related information, into, through, and out of channel member companies.
a. Disintermediation
b. Logistics
c. Materials handling
d. Intermodal transportation
e. Contract logistics
Q:
Which of the following are examples of facilitating functions performed by wholesaling intermediaries?
a. sorting and storing
b. risk taking and promotion
c. assorting, accumulating, grading, and allocating
d. researching and financing
e. financial management and storing
Q:
With respect to the sorting logistical function, _____ is the combining of similar stocks into a larger homogeneous supply.
a. sorting out
b. accumulating
c. allocating
d. breaking bulk
e. assorting
Q:
Breaking bulk at the wholesale level is called:
a. allocating
b. accumulation
c. storing
d. downsizing
e. grading
Q:
All of the following are sorting activities EXCEPT:
a. assorting
b. accumulation
c. sorting out
d. allocation
e. possession
Q:
Marketing channels perform all of the following logistical activities EXCEPT:a. sortingb. storingc. physically distributingd. risk takinge. breaking bulk
Q:
Which of the following is a logistical function performed by intermediaries?
a. sorting
b. negotiating
c. financing
d. risk taking
e. all of these choices
Q:
Transactional channel functions include all of the following activities EXCEPT:
a. contacting buyers
b. promoting the products to be sold
c. taking the risks associated with product inventories
d. negotiating the sale
e. physical distribution and sorting
Q:
Which of the following is a transactional function performed by intermediaries?
a. sorting
b. researching
c. risk taking
d. physically distributing
e. storing
Q:
The three basic functions channel intermediaries perform are:
a. transactional, logistical, and facilitating
b. contacting, negotiating, and ownership
c. promoting, distributing, and bulk-breaking
d. assorting, accumulating, and allocating
e. financing, mediating, and storing
Q:
Generally, _____ determine what type of intermediary a manufacturer should use:
a. product characteristics, buyer consideration, and market characteristics
b. internal environmental characteristics only
c. competitive conditions and government regulations
d. all controllable marketing factors
e. only noncontrollable environmental factors
Q:
_____ are wholesaling intermediaries who facilitate the sales of a product from producer to end user by representing retailers, wholesalers, or manufacturers and providing little input as to the terms of the sale.
a. Marketing facilitators
b. Channel cooperatives
c. Agents and brokers
d. Merchant wholesalers
e. Channel functionaries
Q:
Agents and brokers:
a. have a great deal of control and risk invested in the goods
b. only represent manufacturers in sales situations
c. have a great deal of input on the terms of the sale
d. generally are on salary with the manufacturer
e. do not take title to merchandise
Q:
Long Island Lefty provides retailers and other businesses with the latest and the best products for left-handed consumers. It buys all types of products from a variety of manufacturers and stores the merchandise in its New York warehouse until purchased by buyers. Long Island Lefty does not sell to end users and is an example of a(n):
a. agent or broker
b. merchant wholesaler
c. retailer
d. consumer market
e. hypermarket intermediary
Q:
W.W. Grainger, Inc., is one of the world's largest business-to-business distributors of equipment, component parts, and supplies in the United States and Canada. It has ownership title to over 220,000 products, which are stocked in one national and nine regional warehouses to guarantee product availability and quick service to the many manufacturers who are its customers. W.W. Grainger is an example of a(n):
a. agent or broker
b. merchant wholesaler
c. retailer
d. consumer market
e. hypermarket intermediary
Q:
A(n) _____ is an institution that buys goods from manufacturers, takes title to these goods, and resells them to businesses, government agencies, and/or other wholesalers or retailers.
a. merchant wholesaler
b. agent
c. drop shipper
d. channel cooperative
e. marketing cooperative
Q:
Which of the following intermediaries sell mainly to consumers?
a. retailers
b. merchant wholesalers
c. agents
d. brokers
e. specialists
Q:
Retailers and merchant wholesalers are examples of intermediaries that:
a. take title to a product
b. create temporal and spatial discrepancies
c. use consumer promotions
d. do not benefit from any economies of scale
e. are accurately described by all of these statements
Q:
The major characteristic that is used to differentiate among types of intermediaries is whether they:
a. install exchange barriers such as location, time, and quantity
b. create specialization of labor
c. create economies of scale
d. take title to the products they sell
e. raise profit margins for independent middlemen
Q:
When an intermediary in the channel of distribution owns the merchandise and controls the terms of the sale, this is referred to as:
a. complete control
b. exclusive distribution
c. taking title
d. contact efficiency
e. economies of scale
Q:
Marketing channels make distribution simpler by reducing the number of transactions required to get products from manufacturers to consumers. This is called:
a. forward integration
b. contact efficiency
c. elimination of temporal discrepancies
d. sorting
e. reciprocity
Q:
YKK slide fasteners (zippers) are made in Macon, Georgia, yet manufactures all over the world use zippers to manufacture, clothes, luggage, shoes, and other items. Wholesalers around the world primarily help to overcome a(n) _____ discrepancy.
a. creation
b. temporal
c. assortment
d. spatial
e. ownership
Q:
The difference between the location of a producer and the location of widely scattered markets represents a(n) _____ discrepancy.
a. spatial
b. temporal
c. assortment
d. quantity
e. ownership
Q:
Vicobello is a major manufacturer of outdoor fountains that are currently popular in gardens. Even though fountains represent a product category that does not sell year round due to inclement weather, Vicobello's sales remain steady all year because it sells to wholesale distributors that stock the product. Its wholesale distributors are primarily helping to overcome a(n) _____ discrepancy.
a. assortment
b. spatial
c. possession
d. quantity
e. temporal
Q:
Cutter & Buck is a high-end fashion sportswear company. Even though swimwear is a product category that does not sell year round, its sales remain steady all year because Cutter & Buck sells to wholesale distributors that stock the product. Its wholesale distributors are helping to overcome a(n) _____ discrepancy.
a. assortment
b. spatial
c. possession
d. quantity
e. temporal
Q:
A(n) _____ discrepancy is created when a product is produced but a consumer is not ready to purchase it.
a. quantity
b. supply
c. possession
d. temporal
e. assortment
Q:
Certified Grocers Midwest, Inc., the Chicago-based grocery wholesale cooperative, provides all kinds of meats, cereals, canned and fresh fruits and vegetables, beauty aids, health care items, and pet products to the supermarkets in its channel. Certified Grocers is aiding consumers by overcoming:
a. spatial discrepancy
b. discrepancy of quantity
c. discrepancy of assortment
d. demand discrepancies
e. discrepancy of possession
Q:
McKesson Wholesalers provides health care products to pharmacies. It purchases bandages, gauze, antibacterial cream, and ointments from a variety of different manufacturers and resells them to pharmacies so that many of the items a customer might need for a cut will be available in the store. McKesson is aiding consumers by overcoming a:
a. spatial discrepancy
b. discrepancy of quantity
c. discrepancy of assortment
d. demand discrepancies
e. discrepancy of possession
Q:
Which of the following is the lack of all the items a customer needs to receive full satisfaction from a product or products?
a. discrepancy of assortment
b. discrepancy of quantity
c. spatial discrepancy
d. temporal discrepancy
e. discrepancy of possession
Q:
Kraft Foods produces millions of packages of Chips Ahoy cookies each year, but consumers only want to purchase one package at a time. This difference between the amount Kraft produces and the amount a consumer wants to buy is refer to as a:
a. discrepancy of quantity
b. discrepancy of assortment
c. spatial discrepancy
d. temporal discrepancy
e. discrepancy of possession
Q:
A discrepancy of _____ is the difference between the amount of product produced and the amount an end user wants to buy.
a. space
b. quantity
c. assortment
d. accumulation
e. possession
Q:
Distribution channels aid in overcoming barriers to exchange that are created in the production process by overcoming all of the following types of discrepancies EXCEPT:
a. possession
b. assortment
c. quantity
d. spatial
e. temporal
Q:
Marketing channels can achieve economies of scale through:
a. overcoming spatial discrepancies
b. contact expertise
c. specialization and division of labor
d. overcoming temporal discrepancies
e. overcoming discrepancies of quantity
Q:
Kayak.com is a company that allows customers to efficiently search databases to find the best airline and hotel deals all over the Web. Kayak does not make bookings, but rather provides recommendations for the best travel plans. Travel providers pay Kayak a commission when customers click through to their sites. Kayak.com, travelers, the airlines, and the hotels are all part of a:
a. facilitating agency
b. marketing mix intermediary
c. selective promotion channel
d. marketing channel or channel of distribution
e. transportation channel or channel of movement
Q:
Jones Soda is positioned as the anti-Coke. In the early years, few mainstream retailers sold Jones soda. Fans had to get their Jones fix in surf shops, tattoo parlors, and bookstores, adding to the brand's mystique. Jones Soda used its _____ to create a competitive advantage.
a. channel ascendancy
b. distribution channel
c. channel conflict
d. channel focus
e. vertical integration
Q:
A _____ is a business structure of interdependent organizations that reaches from the point of product origin to the consumer.
a. facilitating agency or place member
b. marketing mix intermediary
c. selective distribution channel
d. marketing channel or channel of distribution
e. transportation channel or channel of movement
Q:
When discussing the distribution of services, you will often hear channel members discussing the need to minimize wait times.
Q:
Unlike marketers of physical products, marketers of services do not have to address the question of logistics since services do not require a distribution strategy.
Q:
Gray marketing channels assist brand name manufacturers in marketing their products more efficiently.
Q:
Because distribution creates the same problems whether it is in Ethiopia, Indonesia, or Canada, you will find that channel structures and types around the world are very similar to those in the United States.
Q:
Many regard vertical conflict as healthy competition.
Q:
Reciprocal conflict occurs among channel members on the same level, such as two or more different wholesalers or two or more different retailers that handle the same manufacturer's brands.
Q:
An international consumer products manufacturer requires all of its suppliers to provide the lowest possible cost and to adhere to a just-in-time inventory system. Wholesalers and manufacturers generally yield to the authority of this large manufacturer. This consumer products manufacturer exercises channel power.
Q:
Manufacturers who require suppliers to meet certain environmental standards are implementing green supply chain management.
Q:
Global supply chains are particularly at risk regarding supply chain security.
Q:
Digital distribution is a distribution technique that includes any kind of product or service that can be distributed electronically.
Q:
Another name for outsourcing is contract logistics.
Q:
Both water transportation costs and transit speed are low when compared with any other transportation mode.
Q:
Traceability with respect to transporting modes refers to the relative ease with which a shipment can be located and transferred.
Q:
Air transportation is faster, cheaper, and more dependable than rail transportation.
Q:
The six criteria important in selecting a transportation mode are relative cost, transit time, reliability, capability, accessibility, and traceability.
Q:
The goal of a materials-handling system is to handle products as infrequently as possible.
Q:
Managing inventory from the supplier to the manufacturer is called distribution resource planning (DRP).
Q:
EDI is often used to replace paper documents with electronic documents containing the same information.
Q:
Integrated channel relationships tend to be more flexible than cooperative relationships.
Q:
Highly integrated channel relationships are the preferred relationship because there is no large outlay of assets required to keep the channel members all working toward the same results.
Q:
At one end of the channel relationship continuum is the "Arm's Length" relationship.
Q:
Exclusive distribution is the most extensive form of market coverage.
Q:
Shopping goods are usually distributed selectively. Consumers are willing to look around for them but may not be willing to search or travel extensively to acquire the product.
Q:
Metallurgical Designs makes gold and silver charms for necklaces and bracelets. It markets its charms to a few retailers in any one region and promotes them intensively to those retailers. This is an example of intensive distribution.
Q:
Supply chain management is a key means of differentiation for a firm and a critical component in marketing and corporate strategy.
Q:
Companies that use supply chain management techniques typically also use a push promotional strategy.
Q:
Supply chain management is completely producer-driven.
Q:
LoneStar Bar & Grill is a small chain of restaurants that feature marinated steaks. The marinade is so popular that LoneStar sells it at its restaurants and also sells it at Kroger supermarkets. This is an example of intensive distribution.
Q:
The direct channel is used more often in consumer markets than in business-to-business markets.
Q:
Harriet Lowe makes children's clothing, which she sells at craft festivals to end users. Lowe does not use channel intermediaries, which means she uses a direct channel.
Q:
The logistical functions performed by intermediaries include physically distributing, storing, sorting, and financing.
Q:
The three basic functions a channel intermediary provides are transactional, logistical, and facilitating functions.
Q:
Carl represents a manufacturer of floor coverings and gets paid a commission for finding buyers and linking them up with the manufacturer. Carl is an example of a merchant wholesaler
Q:
A merchant wholesaler is an institution that buys goods from manufacturers and resells them to businesses, government agencies, and other wholesalers or retailers.
Q:
Consider a scenario in which there are four manufacturers, no intermediaries, and three consumers. Twelve transactions would be required for each consumer to receive products from each manufacturer. The introduction of one intermediary reduces the required number of transactions to four and demonstrates the idea of contact efficiency.
Q:
Residents of Sobarro, New Mexico, live in an isolated area of the state. Residents must travel two hours to receive medical treatment. Luckily, a physician has just opened a new practice in Sobarro. In this case, the physician has overcome service discrepancies by opening an office close to consumers.
Q:
A consumer stopped by the convenience store to buy a bag of charcoal briquettes. She only needs one bag, but the manufacturer produces millions of bags. For consumers, the convenience store overcomes a discrepancy of dimensions.
Q:
As products move through the marketing channel, channel members provide specialization and division of labor, overcome discrepancies, and provide contact efficiency.
Q:
A marketing channel is a business structure composed of interdependent organizations that reach from the point of product origin to the final consumer.
Q:
Imagine a European manufacturer wants to introduce its digital thermostats to the U.S. market. The thermostats are designed to reduce power usage and save energy. What are the two basic channel structures it can use? Briefly describe the advantages and disadvantages of each method.
Q:
Define channel power, channel control, channel leadership, and channel partnering and explain how these four terms are related.
Q:
Describe contract logistics. How does contract logistics affect the efficient deployment of supply chain management?
Q:
Distribution managers select different transportation modes based on several distinct criteria. List and briefly define these criteria, and name the best and worst transportation mode for each criterion.
Q:
What is an inventory control system? Discuss the objective of inventory management and describe materials requirement planning (MRP) and distribution resource planning (DRP).