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I am confused between A & D.

Wouldn't the universal appeal of discounts render the solution MORE cost effective compared to offering free gifts - hence weaken the argument?

I can see D, also weakens this by suggesting the publisher's expenditure on gifts is wasted but not sure how to pick this over A, given official answer is D.

I suspect, since A doesn't specify the extent as clearly as D does, D is "better" answer choice. Any help from others who can shed more light on this would be greatly appreciated!
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D has nothing related to the conclusion, which is the gift promotion. How on earth it can be the right answer. Anyone ?
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Such a Good question also happens to be a very GMAT like question.

A) incorrect- do we want universal appeal or is the company focuses on a certain group- what will be better some people buying a lot or different types of people buying a little.

B) incorrect- but does the same effect happen for discounts or does it lead to less sales to an extent that discounts would have been better, it is a certainty trap commonly used by GMAT.

C) incorrect- talks about promotional efforts in general does nothing to determine why gifts are a bad idea instead of discounts.

D) CORRECT - when the publisher has to refund the price of the magazine to the retailer THEY ALSO HAVE TO REFUND THAT EXTRA DOLLAR OVER THE PRICE WHICH THEY PAID FOR THE GIFT AS COMPARED TO JUST THE PRICE OF THE MAGAZINE WHICH WOULD HAVE HAD A DISCOUNT.

E) incorrect- if anything it strengthens the argument by saying discounts are not a good idea because people will not pay more in the future.

Again such a good question, what is the source?

Thanks for reading.
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YashYashkratos
Such a Good question also happens to be a very GMAT like question.

A) incorrect- do we want universal appeal or is the company focuses on a certain group- what will be better some people buying a lot or different types of people buying a little.

B) incorrect- but does the same effect happen for discounts or does it lead to less sales to an extent that discounts would have been better, it is a certainty trap commonly used by GMAT.

C) incorrect- talks about promotional efforts in general does nothing to determine why gifts are a bad idea instead of discounts.

D) CORRECT - when the publisher has to refund the price of the magazine to the retailer THEY ALSO HAVE TO REFUND THAT EXTRA DOLLAR OVER THE PRICE WHICH THEY PAID FOR THE GIFT AS COMPARED TO JUST THE PRICE OF THE MAGAZINE WHICH WOULD HAVE HAD A DISCOUNT.

E) incorrect- if anything it strengthens the argument by saying discounts are not a good idea because people will not pay more in the future.

Again such a good question, what is the source?

Thanks for reading.

Thank you Yash & gmatophobia for your ellucidation! Source is GMAT Focus official Practice Exam 6. The question came up towards the end of the VR Section. I am currently stuck around V85. CR seems to be the bottleneck for me, especially these types where I am having trouble picking the correct option choice out of two competing ones.
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I have no idea why D is the OA. I am stuck between A, B, C.
C - Possibly incorrect because it is too specific, meaning it talks about "very competitive sectors".

B - Possibly incorrect because even if the profit is diluted, it could still mean higher boost of sales w/ a gift vs with a discount. Not really a weakener.

A - I am still not sure why A is incorrect. It directly attacks gift as a method of promotion. If it does not appeal to the customer, the sales likely won't lead to higher boost. Not the perfect choice, but seems like the best of 5.

D - Completely clueless why it is correct.

KarishmaB GMATNinja MartyMurray GMATGuruNY IanStewart - Please help. Thank you.
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MrWhite
I am currently stuck around V85. CR seems to be the bottleneck for me, especially these types where I am having trouble picking the correct option choice out of two competing ones.
You could get some ideas for choosing between the last two choices from this post.

The Final Key Step in Getting a GMAT Critical Reasoning Question Right – Telling the Difference Between a Trap Choice and the Correct Answer
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Engineer1
I have no idea why D is the OA. I am stuck between A, B, C.
C - Possibly incorrect because it is too specific, meaning it talks about "very competitive sectors".
The conclusion of the argument is about a comparison of the two types of promotions. (C) is about BOTH TYPES. So, it doesn't change the comparison because a fact that's true about both doesn't offset the advantage of the free gift form of promotion that the passage brings up.

Quote:
B - Possibly incorrect because even if the profit is diluted, it could still mean higher boost of sales w/ a gift vs with a discount. Not really a weakener.
Exactly, and the effect could be diluted if the prices of two competing magazines are discounted as well.

Quote:
A - I am still not sure why A is incorrect. It directly attacks gift as a method of promotion. If it does not appeal to the customer, the sales likely won't lead to higher boost. Not the perfect choice, but seems like the best of 5.
Notice that the passage STATES AS FACT that "a one-dollar discount on the retail price (which is set by the publisher) can also boost sales, but the boost tends to be somewhat smaller."

So, regardless of what choice (A) says, we know that the free gift approach boosts sales more.

So, (A) is written to seem to contradict that premise in the passage, but it doesn't and thus has no effect on the argument.

Quote:
D - Completely clueless why it is correct.
The conclusion of the argument is the following:

including a gift is the more cost-effective form of promotion (in comparison with a discount)

Here's the key part of the support for that conclusion that we have to notice:

Doing so might cost the publisher one dollar per copy distributed to newsstands.

We see that including a gift costs the publisher a dollar PER COPY DISTRIBUTED.

What we then have to figure out is that offering a discount costs the publisher only PER COPY SOLD. After all, offering a discount does not cost the publisher anything if the copy is not sold.

So, if what (D) says is true, then it's possible that offering a free gift is not as cost-effective as offering a discount since, in offering a gift the publisher may incur a one-dollar-per-copy cost for each copy returned by newsstands whereas offering a discount won't have the same result since there is no discount-related cost associated with returned copies of a magazine. When copies are returned, the discount disappears.

In other words, (D) presents a factor, additional cost, that may offset the greater size of the boost provided by the gift approach.

Thus, (D) indicates that, actually, offering a discount may turn out to be the more cost-effective form of promotion and thus serves to cast doubt on the conclusion.
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Thank you Karishma and Marty. Did not think of D in the way you mentioned. Now it sounds simple. Appreciate the detailed response.
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­1. Cost of Free Gift vs. Discount:
The publisher spends one dollar per magazine copy on a free gift.
Offering a one-dollar discount also costs the publisher one dollar per copy.

2. Sales Boost:

The argument claims that including a gift results in a larger increase in sales than offering a discount.

3. Cost-Effectiveness:

For including a gift to be more cost-effective, the additional sales generated by the gift need to more than compensate for its cost.


What Option (D) Introduces: Even when there is promotion, newsstands return a quarter or more of the copies they have bought to sell, and the publisher refunds the price the retailer paid for these copies.

Why this weakens the argument: If a significant portion of magazines (a quarter or more) are returned by newsstands, the publisher not only have to refund the retailer for these unsold magazines but also loses the one dollar spent on the gift for these returned copies


Example Calculation: Let's say 100 magazines are sent to newsstands, costing the publisher $100 for the gifts. If 25 of these magazines are returned:
The publisher needs to refund the retailer for 25 magazines (full price).
The publisher loses the $25 spent on gifts for these unsold copies.


==> Therefore, the total cost for the promotion increases from $100 (for gifts) to $125 (including refunds). This additional cost weakens the argument that the gift is more cost-effective than a discount, which does not incur these additional return-related costs.­
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Was pondering between A and D, and ended up choosing D which was fortunate.

Why D is a good answer:
- Let’s say there are 4 copies sold to a newsstand, and it then returns 1 to the publisher
Each cost 2 dollars

Gift:

- Publisher spends ? dollars more, and is then given back 2 dollars
(?, not 4 * 1 = 4 because the argument says that gifting MIGHT - look for the word - cost the publisher one dollar per copy.
So, that cost could be more less)

Discount (now each magazine costs the newsstand 1 dollar):

- The publisher spends 4 dollars more, and is given back 1 dollar
So, we got -? + 2 or -4 + 1. Depending on what the value of ? is, one can be greater than the other.
So, that's the explanation using arithmetic. A more concise explanation would be that with Gifting, the publisher might spend more money adding gifts to the newspaper issues than the money he gets back from the refunds, assuming that the cost per gift is higher than expected. With Discount, the publisher has a more definite result in terms of how much it spends and saves.

With A, the answer is worse because it less directly attacks the argument than D. The answer itself is a decent weakener, but not as much of a sucker punch as D. D directly works with the premises of each plan's costing, while A introduces a hypothetical situation that may or may not happen.
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