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  2. List price - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_price

    The list price, also known as the manufacturer's suggested retail price ( MSRP ), or the recommended retail price ( RRP ), or the suggested retail price ( SRP) of a product is the price at which its manufacturer notionally recommends that a retailer sell the product. [citation needed] Suggested pricing methods may conflict with competition ...

  3. Distribution (marketing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Distribution_(marketing)

    Distribution (or place) is one of the four elements of the marketing mix: the other three elements being product, pricing, and promotion . Decisions about distribution need to be taken in line with a company's overall strategic vision and mission. Developing a coherent distribution plan is a central component of strategic planning.

  4. Vendor-managed inventory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vendor-managed_inventory

    Vendor-managed inventory ( VMI) is an inventory management practice in which a supplier of goods, usually the manufacturer, is responsible for optimizing the inventory held by a distributor. Under VMI, the retailer shares their inventory data with a vendor (sometimes called supplier) such that the vendor is the decision-maker who determines the ...

  5. Discounts and allowances - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Discounts_and_allowances

    Discounts and allowances are reductions to a basic price of goods or services.. They can occur anywhere in the distribution channel, modifying either the manufacturer's list price (determined by the manufacturer and often printed on the package), the retail price (set by the retailer and often attached to the product with a sticker), or the list price (which is quoted to a potential buyer ...

  6. 20 Back-to-School Essentials You Can Get at Dollar Tree

    www.aol.com/20-back-school-essentials-dollar...

    As a parent, high school may be a time of angst and rebellion for your teenager, but at least you won’t have to worry about spending too much on back-to-school essentials at Dollar Tree. It ...

  7. Vendor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vendor

    A vendor is a supply chain management term that means anyone who provides goods or services of experience to another entity. Vendors may sell B2B ( business-to-business; i.e., to other companies), B2C (business to consumers or Direct-to-consumer ), or B2G (business to government). Some vendors manufacture inventoriable items and then sell those ...

  8. Bootstrapping (statistics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bootstrapping_(statistics)

    Bias: The bootstrap distribution and the sample may disagree systematically, in which case bias may occur. If the bootstrap distribution of an estimator is symmetric, then percentile confidence-interval are often used; such intervals are appropriate especially for median-unbiased estimators of minimum risk (with respect to an absolute loss ...

  9. Logistic distribution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Logistic_distribution

    In probability theory and statistics, the logistic distribution is a continuous probability distribution. Its cumulative distribution function is the logistic function, which appears in logistic regression and feedforward neural networks. It resembles the normal distribution in shape but has heavier tails (higher kurtosis ).