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Misrepresentation
When one party makes a false statement to a second party with the intention of making the second party behave a certain way.
Ex. Business falsifies records to convince bank to lend it money
Negligence
When business is not doing something necessary or required.
Ex. When hotel breaches the duty of care
Fraud
Deception purposely carried out to secure unfair or unlawful gain.
Ex. Providing inaccurate information on tax returns and money laundering
Exclusive Dealing
An illegal agreement that forbids customers from buying goods and services from competitors. Many jurisdictions consider this practice illegal when it restricts trade.
Price Discrimination
An illegal activity in which a business charges different customers different prices for similar amounts and types of products.
Full-line forcing
Occurs when a producer requires its intermediaries to carry an entire line of its products rather than one or a few of the items. Can be an illegal activity if it restrains trade and competition
Selective Distribution
A distribution strategy in which a producer sells a product through a limited number of middlemen in a geographic area
Operations Management
The process of planning, controlling, and monitoring the day-to-day activities required for continued business functioning.
Selling
Marketing function that involves determining client needs and wants and responding through planned, personalized communication that influences purchase decisions and enhances future business opportunities.
Information Management
The process of accessing, processing, maintaining, evaluating, and disseminating knowledge, facts, or data to assist business decision making
Pricing
Marketing function that involves determining and adjusting prices to maximize return and meet customers' perceptions of value.
Product/Service Management
The marketing function that involves obtaining, developing, maintaining, and improving a product or service mix in response to market opportunities
Production
The process or activity of producing goods and services
Mapping
Visual Method of note-taking that involves writing the main topic in a circle and writing supporting ideas on lines around the circle.
Cornell Method
Taking notes in two columns
Blind Carbon Copy (BCC)
Hides email addresses from the email's recipients
Place
Making sure that goods and/or services are available where customers need or want them. Can be a physical location or a site where a want or need is fulfilled.
Ex. Hotel building lodging facility on Interstate 95
Elastic Demand
When demand is elastic, consumers adjust demand for products based on price. Demand changes when prices change. Prices go up = consumers purchase less
Inelastic Demand
Demand for a good or service is constant, event if product's price changes
Complementary
Products that are usually together
Stages of Business Cycle
Business cycle involves fluctuating levels of economic activity ranging from expansion to contraction.
In periods of expansion, there is an increase in business growth, employment, and business and consumer spending.
In periods of contraction, business growth slows, unemployment rises, and consumer spending decreases.
Underemployment
Occurs when a worker is not working enough or is not fully using her/his skills and talents. Underemployment rate takes into account friction unemployment, downsizing, and technological unemployment.
Floating Exchange Rate
Determined by supply and demand. Changes depending on the market.
Pegged/Fixed Exchange Rate
Set by government and does not change based on market's fluctuations
Mutual Funds
Carries the advantage of professional management. Comes with a high price. High fees may cut into a mutual fund investor's returns. Mutual fund investors do not risk personal time and effort like entrepreneurs. Has high potential for return. No penalty for early withdrawal from mutual fund.
Accounts Receivable
Money that is owed to a business. They are an asset to the business, but they do not have a physical presence.
Petty cash-fund
A small amount of money that a business keeps on hand for inexpensive business purchases. By maintaining a petty-cash fund, a business can easily pay for things such as steps flowers, and coffee supplies without writing a check or going through regular purchasing procedures. Several factors go into determining amount of money that should be allocated to the petty-cash fund. Factors include average number and dollar amount of transactions that it expects during a certain time period.
Primary Information
New information collected for the purpose at hand.
Secondary Information/Data
Facts and figures that have been collected for purposes other than the project at hand.
Testimonial
Statement by an identified user of a product proclaiming the benefits received from use of the product
Tables
Sections of the database that contain specific categories or types of information about customers.
Ex. A table that contains contact information may include fields that store the customer's name, telephone number, email address, etc. Another table might contain information about the customer's purchasing history-products, quantities, and dates of purchase.
Pie Chart
Businesspeople often use a pie chart to compare the parts of whole concept such as market share of a particular industry or geographic location.
Flowchart
Presents a visual depiction of activities or processes in sequential order by integrating text in a graphic format.
Psychographic Segmentation
Involves dividing the market by consumers' lifestyles or personalities.
Ex. Health and fitness is a lifestyle factor
Demographic Segmentation
Divides market on the basis of its physical and social characteristics.
Ex. gender, education, age, and family life cycle.
Geographic Segmentation
Involves location factors such as physical location, climate, city size, etc.
Conversion Rate
Measures number of inquires that turn into sales expressed as a percentage.
Sample Plan
In marketing research, a sample plan is an outline for the sampling process that ensures that a truly representative sample of the population is selected in the most efficient way possible with the lowest potential for error.
Business Productivity
Amount of goods or services produced by a business from a set amount of resources.
Business Licenses
Documents that grant permission to operate a business
Business Trends
Tendencies and changes in the business world
Process Performance Management
Quality-control method that involves supervising business and manufacturing processes to ensure their quality and efficiency.
Gross Profit
A good indicator of how well a business is controlling its costs.
Semi-Variable Costs
Fixed until the business reaches a certain level of production; after that, they become variable.
Price Markups
Indicates the difference between total cost and selling price
Breakeven Point
Occurs when a company's total sales equal its total expenses.
Invoice
The formal, printed record of a sale that included all necessary information of a sales transaction.
Serves as a legal document or formal agreement in which one party takes possession of goods or services in exchange for payment within a certain time period.
Information includes the buyer, the seller, items purchased, quantities, prices, delivery date, credit, discount terms, etc.
Creative Destruction
Term coined by Austrian economist Joseph Schumpeter, it describes how new goods and services can hurt existing products. This is one risk of innovation
Franchise
A contractual agreement between a parent company and a franchisee to distribute goods or services.
Strategical Alliance/Joint Venture
An agreement that involves two or more businesses entering into a relationship by combining complementary resources such as technology, skills, capital, or distribution channels for the benefit of all parties. The relationship is usually short-term for a single project/transaction.
Licensing
A business structure that requires the authorization or permission from an owner to another entity to use trademarked, copyrighted, or patented material for a specific activity, during a specific time period, for the profit of both parties.
Industries
-Hospitality industry: Provides services to people who are away from home.
-Recreation industry: A segment of the hospitality industry, provides services designed to provide rest, relaxation, and enjoyment.
-Entertainment businesses: Part of recreation industry. Includes movie theaters, concerts, and plays.
-Lodging industry: Consists of businesses that provide sleeping accommodations for travelers.
-Travel businesses: Provide transportation.
-Tourism industry: consists of businesses that promote travel for business and leisure.
Feasibility Study
Involves evaluating the target market's interest in the product, as well as production and marketing costs.
Product Extension
Involves adding a similar good or service to an existing product line or product category.
Product Bundling
Involves packaging two or more similar products together and selling them at a single price that is lower than if the customers purchase the items separately.
Brand Positioning
Branding strategy in which marketers create a certain image or impression of a brand as compared to those of competitors' brands.
Corporate Brand
All of the combined customer impressions and experiences associated with a particular company.
Short Message System/Service (SMS)
Technology that enables people to send text messages over cell phones.
Blog
Primary purpose of a corporate blog is to connect with company's target market in a more informal and personal way than through the corporate website. Blogs typically have articles podcasts, and videos about business-related topics that interest audience. Blogs should be reusable. Selling products is not primary purpose of blog.
"Search-friendly" URL
Businesses should strive to use an in-house classification for URLs by using clear, relevant keywords. Using applicable keywords in the URL is more likely to yield a higher placement in a search engine's results field when users want to find specific topics, articles, and authors.
Advertising Message
Color: tool used by advertisers use to create a certain mood.
Placement: The way in which the advertisement's elements are arranged on the page.
Reach: a quantitative measure of the number o different people in the target audience who are exposed at least once to an advertising message.
Frequency: quantitative measure of the average number of times a target consumer is exposed to an advertising message.
Value (artistic term)
In artistic terms, value is the degree of lightness or darkness on the surface of something such as an object in a drawing or photograph
Illustration
Graphic component of advertisement that visually ties headline and copy together. May include photographs, drawings, paintings, or a combination of media. Type of illustration has an impact on mood or tone of the advertisement.
Simulation
Imitation or an actual or plausible situation that enables trainees to practice their behavior and responses under certain circumstances. Often used for training purposes.
Word-of-mouth
(WOM) marketing involves customers communicating with others about satisfaction with a business. Occurs in person or online.
Publicity
Any non personal presentation of ideas, goods, or services that is not paid for by the company or individual that benefits from or is harmed by it.
Advergaming
Inclusion of a product, brand, or company in a video game for promotion
Cooperative advertising
When producers provide channel members with financial support to cover advertising expenses.
Template
Basic layout that developers use to create a web page. Provides visual consistency as visitors click through different sections of the website.
Hyperlink
Component of an electronic document that computer users click on to jump to another place within the document or into a different document.
Heat map
Color-coded graphical representation that shows marketers the ways in which visitors interact with the website
Server log
Purpose is to maintain a history of website page requests
Press kit
Purpose of press kit is to provide tools to obtain publicity through various media outlets. Should contain information about the business.
Product Acquisition
Involves location and purchasing goods for business use or for resale.
Institutional/Corporate Promotion
Type of promotion that aims to create a certain image in the eyes of consumers.
Quality assurance
Process that businesses use to prevent defective products from being produced
Competitive Analysis
Process of comparing a business's income statement with that of its competitors to see how it is doing by industry standards.
Retention rate
metric expressed as a percentage and indicates a business's ability to keep customers over a certain period of time
Accounting System
Consists of the methods and procedures used in consistently handling the business's financial information
Suggestion Selling
Sales technique in which the salesperson attempts to increase the customer's purchase by suggesting additional products to buy after the customer has made his original purchase decision
Up-selling
Sales technique in which salesperson suggests a higher priced product than the one that the customer originally requests