- Fri Dec 20, 2019 10:47 am
#72674
Complete Question Explanation
Strengthen, #%. The correct answer choice is (A).
The CEO concludes that, on the whole, "this will be a good year for us in terms of sales." However, the CEO only has the first nine months of sales data to rely. Thus, the CEO is assuming that the final three months of the year will not be so bad as to cause the overall sales figures to drop below prior years. After all, if the company sold nothing in the final three months of the year, then the overall sales for the year would very likely be lower than prior years.
To strengthen the argument, we need to find an answer choice that bolsters the CEO's assumption. In other words, we want an answer choice that suggests the final three months of sales will be good enough to keep the overall sales for the year higher than prior years. This is our prephrase.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. Answer choice A exactly fits the prephrase. If the company "typically" has its highest monthly sales during the last three months of the year, then there is an additional reason to think the same will occur this year, and the CEO's expectation of a good year is somewhat more likely to be met.
Answer choice (B): Even if the quality of the products the company sells has always been considered to be relatively, we need to know that the company will sell enough products in the final three months of the year to exceed prior years' overall sales. The quality of products does nothing to help assure us that the final three months of this year's sales are likely to be strong enough to meet that expectation.
Answer choice (C): This answer choice has no impact on the argument. The CEO's motive to highlight good news does not give us any reason one way or the other to expect that the final three months of this year's sales will be good (or bad).
Answer choice (D): This answer choice has no impact on the argument. Because on the LSAT we can never be sure that the future will match the past, the unusual effectiveness of the advertising campaign in the first nine months of the year is not good reason to expect that it will be similarly effective in the final three months of the year. Moreover, even if the advertising campaign proved to be effective in those final three months, if the company normally makes no sales in the final three months, even a slight boost from the advertising campaign might not be enough to predict that this year's overall sales would constitute a "good year."
Answer choice (E): This answer choice has no impact on the argument. The performance of other companies during the preceding nine months tells us nothing about whether this particular company (or even those other comparable companies) will perform well in terms of sales in the final three months of the year.
Strengthen, #%. The correct answer choice is (A).
The CEO concludes that, on the whole, "this will be a good year for us in terms of sales." However, the CEO only has the first nine months of sales data to rely. Thus, the CEO is assuming that the final three months of the year will not be so bad as to cause the overall sales figures to drop below prior years. After all, if the company sold nothing in the final three months of the year, then the overall sales for the year would very likely be lower than prior years.
To strengthen the argument, we need to find an answer choice that bolsters the CEO's assumption. In other words, we want an answer choice that suggests the final three months of sales will be good enough to keep the overall sales for the year higher than prior years. This is our prephrase.
Answer choice (A): This is the correct answer choice. Answer choice A exactly fits the prephrase. If the company "typically" has its highest monthly sales during the last three months of the year, then there is an additional reason to think the same will occur this year, and the CEO's expectation of a good year is somewhat more likely to be met.
Answer choice (B): Even if the quality of the products the company sells has always been considered to be relatively, we need to know that the company will sell enough products in the final three months of the year to exceed prior years' overall sales. The quality of products does nothing to help assure us that the final three months of this year's sales are likely to be strong enough to meet that expectation.
Answer choice (C): This answer choice has no impact on the argument. The CEO's motive to highlight good news does not give us any reason one way or the other to expect that the final three months of this year's sales will be good (or bad).
Answer choice (D): This answer choice has no impact on the argument. Because on the LSAT we can never be sure that the future will match the past, the unusual effectiveness of the advertising campaign in the first nine months of the year is not good reason to expect that it will be similarly effective in the final three months of the year. Moreover, even if the advertising campaign proved to be effective in those final three months, if the company normally makes no sales in the final three months, even a slight boost from the advertising campaign might not be enough to predict that this year's overall sales would constitute a "good year."
Answer choice (E): This answer choice has no impact on the argument. The performance of other companies during the preceding nine months tells us nothing about whether this particular company (or even those other comparable companies) will perform well in terms of sales in the final three months of the year.