- Mon Aug 13, 2018 3:54 pm
#49471
That analysis requires us to assume that the under-25 folks ARE the ones most likely to buy the products, akanshalsat. But we shouldn't be assuming anything here - we should be explaining why the advertisers made their decision. What if the old folks, the ones spending the most money, are the ones most likely to buy the products? If we assume that, then answer A doesn't resolve the paradox, but instead deepens it! Don't assume that the advertisers have made a good decision. Instead, SHOW that they have, by picking an answer that explains why their decision is correct.
Answer D does this by telling us that there is no point to focusing their ads on the older group, because nothing you do is going to change their buying habits. They will either buy your product or they will not, and the advertisement will make no difference to most of them. This tells us that focusing on the younger group makes sense, even though they spend less money, because if we can influence their buying habits now, we might increase sales now, and perhaps lock those customers in for life once they get older and their buying habits become fixed. Hook them while they're young!
Think again about answer choice A, and ask yourself why you think the younger folks are the ones most likely to buy. Why do you think the advertisers are making the right choice? You should find that whatever your reasoning is, it requires that you bring in additional outside help to the answer that isn't provided in the stimulus. That makes the answer bad, because the answer should stand or fall on its own, with no help from you.
Adam M. Tyson
PowerScore LSAT, GRE, ACT and SAT Instructor
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