Free GMAT Practice Questions

Question 1 of 1
ID: GMAT-RC-1
Section: Verbal Reasoning - Reading Comprehension

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Passage

Purchase of enterprise software packages has always been perceived to be a time-consuming and complicated activity by customers. However, the number of options to choose from and the amount of information available for each option have both increased dramatically over the last decade. It is well established that greater availability of both choice and information increases the time that customers take to arrive at a decision as they carefully weigh the pros and cons of different options. Such acute awareness of the advantages of the forsaken alternatives and the disadvantages of the chosen option also decreases customer satisfaction with the purchase decision and produces purchase regret.

Most suppliers of enterprise software packages are unaware of these difficulties faced by potential buyers. In their attempt to be customer-centric, they encourage their sales professionals to let the customer take the lead in defining his requirements and to only respond to explicit requests for support made by the customer instead of proactively prescribing solutions to him. They believe that they are empowering their customers by presenting all available options and providing a wealth of information such as statistics, use cases, white papers and testimonials for each alternative. However, one study has found that this responsive selling strategy decreases the purchase ease of buyers by 20 percent and increases purchase regret by 50 percent when compared to the respective scores for these metrics in the baseline scenario where the seller did nothing to influence the customer's purchase decision. On the other hand, proactively prescribing one specific solution from a suite of options along with a clear rationale based on a nuanced understanding of the customer's requirements was found to increase purchase ease by 90 percent and decrease purchase regret by 40 percent with respect to the baseline scenario.

(Adapted from an article published in Harvard Business Review: hbr.org)

Sub-Question 1 of 6

In the passage, the author is primarily concerned with

Aintroducing evidence that proves how one party involved in a process manipulates the other party
Bdefending the ideas that one party involved in a process has about the other party
Cexplaining an unintended misunderstanding that a party has about the other involved in a process
Dsuggesting several possible outcomes of the failure of one party involved in a process to adopt a particular strategy
Eintroducing a new strategy that is unfamiliar to both parties involved in a process
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