Why D is correct and B is wrong:The Author's Key Criticism: The passage argues that these management texts fail because:
1. External factors (like the Great Recession) overwhelm any internal practices
2. Failed companies share the same "success" practices as successful ones
Your Reasoning: You thought: "If shared practices don't guarantee success, then evidence about shared practices (D) won't help. At least B adds practical value."
The Trap: You missed a
critical phrase in Choice D.
Look closely at D: "Evidence suggesting that certain practices are shared by most businesses that
successfully weather economic change"
This isn't about generic "shared practices." This specifically addresses the author's complaint that external factors overwhelm internal practices.
What D offers: Evidence that some practices actually help companies
survive through economic turbulence- directly countering the author's criticism.
Why B fails: The author's complaint isn't "these texts lack practical application." The author's complaint is "the underlying analysis is flawed."
Adding "practical advice" for implementing
ineffective practices doesn't improve the text - it just makes bad advice easier to follow.
Simple test: Does the choice
address the author's actual criticism?
- B → No (adds implementation, not better analysis)
- D → Yes (shows practices can work despite economic change)
Answer: Dkartickdey
in reference to the first Question: It is given in the passage " whatever qualities that may be shared among the relatively small number of long-term survivors are inevitably shared as well by far more businesses that never achieve financial success. "so even a company follows certain practices shared by most businesses that successfully weather economic change, there is no guarantee that it will succeed. In that sense including option D would not enhance the quality of the text; rather some practical valure might. So I thought B is the correct answer. Please clarify my doubt.