Hi Anna,
That's a good question. In that one, the salesperson presents the argument's main conclusion in the first sentence of the stimulus (to be a successful salesperson you need at least three years in sales). Let's reorder this stimulus, and begin by considering the premises of the argument:
Premise i) To succeed as a salesperson, you need to establish a client base:
succeed in sales
establish client base
Premise ii) According to studies, if you spend
at least 3 years developing a client base, you can make it in sales. Note the new condition that has now appeared--
at least 3 years:
3+ years establishing client base
comfortable living in sales
Note that this condition is distinguishable from the necessary condition in the first premise, which requires that a client base be
established but doesn't specify a minimum number of years.
Conclusion: When a salesperson is successful, it shows that the person has been in sales for 3+ years:
Succeed in sales
3+ years in sales
Why is this conclusion flawed? It is not supported by either premise.
Premise (ii) provides that if you spend 3+ years you can make a comfortable living in sales:
3+ years establishing client base
comfortable living in sales
This does not support the conclusion, which, at best, reverses this relationship:
succeed in sales
3+ years in sales
(I say "at best" because it is not entirely clear that making a comfortable living is the same as success)
As for Premise (i), it provides that to succeed in sales you need to establish a client base. This is very different from the conclusion's more specific requirement that to succeed in sales you need to put in at least three years:
Premise:
succeed as a salesperson
establish client base
(Flawed) Conclusion:
succeed as a salesperson
at least 3 years in sales
Based on the premise above, we know that if you are a successful salesperson you need to establish a client base. The problem is that that doesn't necessarily require 3+ years.
Again, the premise merely requires that a client base be
established. The author jumps to the conclusion that salesperson success requires at least three years. This is what correct answer choice (B) provides: the author doesn't consider the possibility that a client base could be established in under three years.
Tricky one! I hope that's helpful--please let me know whether this is clear--thanks!
~Steve