This is the total number of multiple-choice questions on a standard DECA Career Cluster exam.
What is 100?
This type of research data is collected firsthand by the business specifically for the problem at hand, rather than gathered from existing studies.
What is Primary Data?
This economic term describes the condition where unlimited human desires face limited resources, forcing people to make choices.
What is Scarcity?
This is the first step of the professional selling process, which involves identifying potential customers.
What is Prospecting?
This department is primarily responsible for recruiting, hiring, training, and managing employee benefits within an organization.
What is Human Resources (HR)?
For most written research events and operations research projects, this is the maximum page limit allowed for the written report.
What is 20 pages? (Or 10 pages for some specific startup events)
A small, diverse group of people brought together to participate in a guided discussion about a product before it launches is known as this.
What is a Focus Group?
This financial metric represents the total value of all final goods and services produced within a country's borders in a specific year.
What is GDP (Gross Domestic Product)?
When a salesperson convinces a customer to buy a higher-priced, more premium version of a product instead of the basic model, they are doing this.
What is Upselling?
This style of leadership involves a hands-off approach, allowing employees to make the majority of the decisions.
What is Laissez-faire?
This specific Career Cluster exam is taken by students competing in Sports & Entertainment Marketing or Retail Merchandising.
What is the Marketing Exam?
This common research method involves observing and mimicking consumer behavior in a controlled environment to see how they interact with store displays.
What is Experimental (or Observation) Research?
This type of cost does not change with an increase or decrease in the amount of goods or services produced, such as rent or insurance.
What is a Fixed Cost?
This iconic 4-letter marketing acronym outlines the stages a consumer goes through: Attention, Interest, Desire, and Action.
What is AIDA?
This management framework breaks down strategic goals into four criteria: Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats.
What is a SWOT Analysis?
In written event presentations, competitors are frequently permitted to use this type of three-panel cardboard display to present their ideas to the judge.
What is a tri-fold board?
This is the term for a subset of a larger population where every member has an equal, non-zero chance of being selected for a market research survey.
What is a Simple Random Sample?
This is the economic term for the loss of potential gain from other alternatives when one alternative is chosen over another.
What is Opportunity Cost?
This type of promotion relies on a short-term incentive, such as a coupon, BOGO deal, or free sample, to motivate immediate purchases.
What is Sales Promotion?
This term refers to the vertical line of authority and communication that clarifies who reports to whom throughout an organization.
What is the Chain of Command?
On a DECA exam, this type of question asks a student to identify the correct channel of distribution or corporate structure, falling under this specific operational area category.
What is Business Administration Core?
In data analysis, this specific metric represents the percentage of website visitors who leave the site after viewing only one page without taking any action.
What is the Bounce Rate?
This accounting principle requires businesses to record expenses in the same period as the revenues they helped to generate.
What is the Matching Principle?
This unique selling concept involves creating a phrase or strategic statement that clearly explains how your product solves customers' problems and delivers specific benefits better than the competition.
What is a Value Proposition (or Unique Selling Proposition / USP)?
This motivational theory, highly relevant in HR role-plays, separates workplace factors into "Hygiene factors" (like salary and job security) and "Motivation factors" (like recognition and growth).
What is Herzberg's Two-Factor Theory?