Answer:
The correct answer is letter a. cross-promotion.
Explanation:
Simply put, cross-promotion is any activity that uses one product to advertise another. There are several ways to do so, some of them resulting from a sort of partnership between companies that will lead to a win-win situation. For example, a fast food chain can partner up with the producer of a famous animation movie to give away toys of the movie characters. That way, the restaurants and the movie attract more attention. In the case described in the question, we do not know if there is a partnership between companies going on. What seems to be the case is that the store wishes to sell more and, consequently, profit more. The owner or manager knows that people who drink hot chocolate tend to buy marshmallows to put in the beverage, so placing them in proximity serves to promote the marshmallows and increase their sales.
Answer:
At the end of the Seven Years War in 1763 (and the Franco-Indian War), the United Kingdom of Great Britain emerged triumphant against France in North America, but ended up heavily indebted. Taxes in England were already very high, so it was decided that American settlers should contribute more. The British Parliament then passed the March 1765 Stamp Act, which placed a direct tax on the colonies that formally began on November 1. The new tax angered American settlers, who argued that their "rights as English" meant that new taxes could not be levied on them because they had no representation in Parliament. At that time, in fact, many settlers rejected the representatives solution by claiming that their "local circumstances" made it impossible.
Explanation:
Because they were better (still editing)
The theory of planned behavior posits that behavior is a function of attitudes, subjective norms, behavioral intentions, and the