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A stacked bar chart shows the annual sales (in € thousands) of five technology companies—A through E—from 2014 to 2018. Each bar represents the total industry sales for the year, broken down by company.
An industry analyst is tasked with identifying long-term market behavior based on relative market shares, not absolute sales amounts.
Based solely on the graph described, the company with the most consistent market share over the five years is , and the company whose market share declined most sharply is .
A stacked bar chart shows the annual sales (in € thousands) of five technology companies—A through E—from 2014 to 2018. Each bar represents the total industry sales for the year, broken down by company.
An industry analyst is tasked with identifying long-term market behavior based on relative market shares, not absolute sales amounts.
Based solely on the graph described, the company with the most consistent market share over the five years is , and the company whose market share declined most sharply is .
To determine which company had the most consistent market share, we must examine how the relative size of each company’s segment (its band within the stacked bar) changes across the five years. Remember, a stacked bar chart represents total market sales as a full bar, and each company's proportional share as a segment within it.
Company D appears as a uniform band across all five years. Although the overall market size changes, the height of Company D’s segment as a proportion of the total bar remains nearly unchanged. This visual consistency reflects a stable market share, making Company D the correct choice.
To determine which company experienced the most significant decline in market share, we look for the company whose segment visibly shrinks the most from 2014 to 2018.
Company E shows a notable contraction in its segment size over time. In 2014, Company E occupied a substantial portion of the bar, but by 2018, its segment has narrowed dramatically, indicating a significant drop in proportional contribution to the market. No other company exhibits such a consistent and sharp visual decline.
Hi Bunuel, here the word consistent market share means, that the company that has the same share without any increase or decrease right? Although i got this correct, initially I stumbled between company B and company D for the first answer choice.
The word “consistent” makes me stumble here. Consistent as in “stay the same”? It’s definitely A. It is the only company whose change — both direction-wise and proportion-wise — matches the market change in every 5 instances. As for the share of company D, its share is actually inconsistent. The absolute number is always the same, it does not change with the market, meaning that its share is always different.
It can't be B: B's share rises in 2016 when the market actually shrinks. It can't be C: C's share sharply declines in 2015 when the market is increasing slightly. It can't be D: it's absolute value is seemingly the same every year, while the market fluctuates significantly during these 5 years. If the absolute value stays the same during these fluctuations, it means that the relative value is fluctuating as well. That is, not consistent. It can't be E either: it's absolute value is actually declining every year no matter the market movement.
Finally, there is A. Whenever the market is rising, the absolute value is rising as well. Whenever the market is falling, the absolute values matches the movement. This is what I would actually call consistent.
To solve this, I calculated the market share for each company from 2014 to 2018 by dividing each company’s sales by the total sales for that year and converting it to a percentage. For example, in 2014, total sales were 200, so Company D’s market share was I repeated this for each year and company. For the most consistent market share, I noticed Company D’s sales remained constant 14-15%