Examination Questions And Correct
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Rationales 2026 Q&A | Instant
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Question 1
Which of the following best defines the primary objective of strategic sourcing?
A) Minimizing the unit price of every purchased item
B) Reducing the total number of suppliers to a single source
C) Aligning procurement activities with overall corporate strategy to maximize
total value
D) Ensuring all purchases are made from domestic suppliers to reduce lead time
Answer: C) Aligning procurement activities with overall corporate strategy to
maximize total value
Rationale: Strategic sourcing is not merely about price reduction; it is a
comprehensive approach that integrates procurement with the organization's
long-term goals. It considers total cost of ownership, risk, innovation, and supplier
relationships to deliver maximum value, not just the lowest price. Options A, B,
and D are tactical or narrow in scope and do not capture the strategic nature of
the function.
Question 2
In the context of total cost of ownership (TCO), which cost is typically the most
difficult to quantify?
,A) Invoice price
B) Transportation and freight
C) Quality failure costs (e.g., rework, scrap, warranty)
D) Storage and warehousing
Answer: C) Quality failure costs (e.g., rework, scrap, warranty)
Rationale: While invoice price, freight, and storage are relatively straightforward
to calculate from accounting data, quality failure costs are often hidden and
spread across multiple departments. They include intangible elements like loss of
customer goodwill, expediting costs, production downtime, and administrative
overhead for managing returns. These are notoriously difficult to assign precise
monetary values, making them the most challenging component of TCO.
Question 3
A purchasing manager is evaluating a supplier's financial stability. Which financial
ratio is most indicative of a supplier's ability to meet short-term obligations?
A) Debt-to-equity ratio
B) Current ratio
C) Return on assets
D) Gross profit margin
Answer: B) Current ratio
Rationale: The current ratio (current assets divided by current liabilities) measures
a company's liquidity and its capacity to pay short-term debts with short-term
assets. This is critical for a purchasing manager because a supplier with poor
liquidity may struggle to finance raw materials or payroll, leading to delivery
disruptions. Debt-to-equity measures leverage, ROA measures profitability, and
gross margin measures operational efficiency—none directly address short-term
solvency as the current ratio does.
Question 4
What is the primary purpose of a Request for Proposal (RFP) versus a Request for
,Quotation (RFQ)?
A) RFP is used for standard commodities; RFQ is for complex services
B) RFP seeks detailed solutions and approaches, while RFQ seeks price quotes for
well-defined specifications
C) RFQ is legally binding, while RFP is not
D) RFP is only used in public sector procurement
Answer: B) RFP seeks detailed solutions and approaches, while RFQ seeks price
quotes for well-defined specifications
Rationale: An RFQ is appropriate when requirements are clear, specifications are
detailed, and the primary differentiator is price. An RFP is used when the buyer
needs suppliers to propose innovative solutions, methodologies, or technical
approaches to meet a performance-based need, often when specifications are not
fully defined. The distinction is based on the nature of the requirement, not on
legal status or sector.
Question 5
Which contract type places the least amount of cost risk on the buyer?
A) Cost-plus-percentage-of-cost
B) Cost-plus-fixed-fee
C) Firm fixed-price
D) Time-and-materials
Answer: C) Firm fixed-price
Rationale: In a firm fixed-price contract, the supplier bears the risk of cost
overruns because the price is set and does not change regardless of the supplier's
actual costs. This transfers maximum cost risk to the supplier. Cost-plus contracts
(A and B) and time-and-materials (D) pass cost risk to the buyer, as the buyer
reimburses actual costs plus a fee.
Question 6
When using the Kraljic Portfolio Matrix, which quadrant describes items that are
, low in supply risk and low in profit impact?
A) Strategic items
B) Leverage items
C) Bottleneck items
D) Routine items
Answer: D) Routine items
Rationale: The Kraljic matrix classifies purchases based on two dimensions: profit
impact and supply risk. Routine items (also called non-critical) have low profit
impact and low supply risk. These are typically standard commodities with many
suppliers. Leverage items have high profit impact but low supply risk; bottleneck
items have low profit impact but high supply risk; strategic items have high scores
on both dimensions.
Question 7
Which of the following is a key benefit of implementing an e-procurement
system?
A) Elimination of all human decision-making in purchasing
B) Guaranteed compliance with all environmental regulations
C) Increased transactional efficiency and reduced maverick buying
D) Automatic selection of the lowest-priced supplier regardless of quality
Answer: C) Increased transactional efficiency and reduced maverick buying
Rationale: E-procurement automates routine purchasing tasks, streamlines
requisition-to-pay processes, and enforces purchasing policies through catalog
controls and approval workflows, which reduces off-contract (maverick) spending.
It does not eliminate human judgment, does not guarantee environmental
compliance, and should not force automatic selection solely on price—sourcing
decisions remain strategic.
Question 8
A supplier consistently delivers products that are 1% below the specified weight.