subject
Business, 30.03.2020 22:35 ghadeeraljelawy

Perform a "product-by-value" analysis on products A, B, C, D, and E. A B C D E Unit Contribution $0.95 $0.85 $0.14 $1.45 $0.85 Total Contribution $93 comma 000 $78 comma 000 $58 comma 000 $63 comma 000 $103 comma 000 The list of products in descending order of their individual dollar contribution to the firm: ▼ B, C, D, A, E D, E, B, A, C C, A, B, E, D C, E, B, A, D D, A, B, E, C E, A, C, B, D . The list of products in descending order of their total dollar contribution to the firm: ▼ E, A, B, D, C B, C, E, A, D C, D, B, A, E C, A, B, D, E D, A, C, B, E E, D, B, A, C . Based on the "product-by-value" analysis, which products are the 3 lowest in total dollar contribution and, therefore, possible candidates for replacement? Products ▼ C, B, and E B, A, and E C, D, and B C, D, and A should be investigated for replacement.

ansver
Answers: 2

Other questions on the subject: Business

image
Business, 22.06.2019 05:30, tommyaberman
Sally is buying a home and the closing date is set for april 20th. the annual property taxes are $1,234.00 and have not been paid yet. using actual days, how much will the buyer be credited and the seller be debited
Answers: 2
image
Business, 22.06.2019 07:50, ShawnSaviro4918
In december of 2004, the company you own entered into a 20-year contract with a grain supplier for daily deliveries of grain to its hot dog bun manufacturing facility. the contract called for "10,000 pounds of grain" to be delivered to the facility at the price of $100,000 per day. until february 2017, the supplier provided processed grain which could easily be used in your manufacturing process. however, no longer wanting to absorb the cost of having the grain processed, the supplier began delivering whole grain. the supplier is arguing that the contract does not specify the type of grain that would be supplied and that it has not breached the contract. your company is arguing that the supplier has an onsite processing plant and processed grain was implicit to the terms of the contract. over the remaining term of the contract, reshipping and having the grain processed would cost your company approximately $10,000,000, opposed to a cost of around $1,000,000 to the supplier. after speaking with in-house counsel, it was estimated that litigation would cost the company several million dollars and last for years. weighing the costs of litigation, along with possible ambiguity in the contract, what are three options you could take to resolve the dispute? which would be the best option for your business and why?
Answers: 2
image
Business, 22.06.2019 08:10, rleiphart1
Bakery has bought 250 pounds of muffin dough. they want to make waffles or muffins in half-dozen packs out of it. half a dozen of muffins requires 1 lb of dough and a pack of waffles uses 3/4 lb of dough. it take bakers 6 minutes to make a half-dozen of waffles and 3 minutes to make a half-dozen of muffins. their profit will be $1.50 on each pack of waffles and $2.00 on each pack of muffins. how many of each should they make to maximize profit, if they have just 20 hours to do everything?
Answers: 3
image
Business, 22.06.2019 11:10, addsd
Sam and diane are completing their federal income taxes for the year and have identified the amounts listed here. how much can they rightfully deduct? • agi: $80,000 • medical and dental expenses: $9,000 • state income taxes: $3,500 • mortgage interest: $9,500 • charitable contributions: $1,000.
Answers: 1
You know the right answer?
Perform a "product-by-value" analysis on products A, B, C, D, and E. A B C D E Unit Contribution $0....

Questions in other subjects:

Konu
Mathematics, 08.04.2021 02:00
Konu
Mathematics, 08.04.2021 02:00
Konu
Mathematics, 08.04.2021 02:00