Use this information for questions that refer to the World Tennis Ball (WTB) Company case.World Tennis Ball Co. (WTB) makes tennis balls and sells them only in the United States. Raul Fernandez, the firm's marketing manager, is comparing his firm's distribution with two major competitors.1) WTB sells its products through four regional distributors, who then sell to 22 sporting goods wholesalers. The wholesalers sell to a total of 7,000 retail outlets. From its website, WTB also sells directly to any customer who will purchase a minimum quantity of 24 tennis balls. WTB cooperates with members of its channel but maintains some control through its economic power and leadership. It helps to direct the activities of the whole channel and tries to avoid or resolve channel conflicts.2)

American Tennis Ball (ATB) is a competitor that sells through two distributors-each with half the country. The distributors then sell through six sporting goods wholesalers, and they, in turn, sell to 1,000 retail outlets (split between two national sporting goods chains and two general merchandise stores). ATB and its channel make little effort to work together. However, because of a relatively low level of competition between the distributors, the wholesalers, or the retail stores, each member of the channel gives the product special attention.3) National Tennis Ball (NTB) sells its products through only three tennis specialty wholesalers that sell only to tennis clubs. NTB actually owns the wholesale firms that handle its products. NTB's balls are only available at certain tennis clubs and NTB limits coverage to only one club in a particular geographic area.National Tennis Ball's channel arrangement

A. is an example of intensive distribution.
B. is called horizontal distribution.
C. illustrates a traditional channel system.
D. is likely to be characterized by a high level of conflict between channel members.
E. relies on exclusive distribution.


Answer: E

Business

You might also like to view...

Betsy, a teenager, uses most of her after-school hours in either playing tennis or watching movies. She barely manages to concentrate on her lessons for a couple of hours before exams

Being questioned about her substandard performance in school, she points out the teacher's inability to complete the entire course during the school hours as the possible reason. Betsy's behavior is most likely to be associated with ________. A) generalization B) hedonic bias C) discrimination D) selective attention E) psychological repositioning

Business

Which best describes the overall results of Stogdill's second survey when compared with his Initial survey?

A. there was little to no difference in the findings B. situational factors became less of a focus C. it was more balanced in its descriptions of the role of traits and leadership D. personality played a larger role in leadership

Business

Answer the following statements true (T) or false (F)

1. The number one source of cybercrime against organizations is external hackers. 2. Transactional processing systems are used to handle routine and non-routine business matters. 3. Encoding is the process of translating the message into a meaningful form and determining if feedback, a response, or a new message is needed. 4. Filtering is the process of altering or distorting information to project a more favorable image.

Business

What kind of agreement existed between Randy and Carl over the car?

A) bailment for the sole benefit of the bailor B) bailment for the sole benefit of the bailee C) mutual benefit bailment D) bailment at will

Business