TEST QUESTIONS AND CORRECT ANSWERS
GRADED A+
●● Effective sales dialogues (key characteristics)
Answer: Are planned and practiced, encourage buyer feedback, focus on
value creation, present value clearly, engage the buyer, and use objective
claims
●● Buyer feedback
Answer: Ongoing assessment of buyer reactions and responses to
measure interest, relationship climate, and progress toward a purchase
decision
●● Climate (sales dialogue context)
Answer: The overall tone and relationship quality between salesperson
and buyer during a sales interaction
●● Check-backs (response-checks)
Answer: Questions used during a sales dialogue to generate buyer
feedback and confirm understanding or interest
●● Purpose of check-backs
,Answer: To confirm benefits, assess interest, evaluate objections, and
ensure the sales presentation is effective
●● Examples of check-back questions
Answer: "How does this sound to you?", "Does this make sense?",
"What do you think?", "Is this something valuable to you?"
●● Creating customer value (sales meaning)
Answer: Identifying what the buyer considers important and presenting
solutions that deliver those confirmed benefits
●● Confirmed benefits
Answer: Benefits the buyer specifically indicates are important and
valuable to them
●● Recommended solution (sales)
Answer: A product or service presentation that emphasizes features that
deliver the buyer's confirmed benefits
●● Interesting and understandable sales dialogue
Answer: A presentation style that uses comparisons, analogies,
examples, voice variation, and stories to make information engaging and
clear
,●● Verbal support elements
Answer: Techniques like voice changes, comparisons, analogies,
examples, and stories used to enhance understanding and interest
●● Comparison (sales dialogue)
Answer: A statement showing similarities between two ideas or products
to clarify value
●● Analogy
Answer: A comparison that explains one thing in terms of another to
simplify understanding
●● Example (sales dialogue)
Answer: A brief real or hypothetical instance used to illustrate a product
feature or benefit
●● Anecdote
Answer: A story-based example describing a specific incident to make a
point more engaging
●● Storytelling in sales
Answer: Using emotional narrative to engage buyers, then supporting
decisions with logic and benefits
, ●● Why storytelling is effective in sales
Answer: People decide emotionally first, then justify decisions with
logic
●● Exposition (story structure)
Answer: The introduction of characters, setting, and background in a
story
●● Rising action
Answer: The part of a story where tension or complications build
●● Climax
Answer: The point of highest tension or turning point in a story
●● Falling action
Answer: The consequences or results following the climax, including
resolution movement
●● Denouement
Answer: The conclusion or ending of a story, often showing resolution
or outcome
●● Communication goals in sales presentation