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Whittenberg Distributors,a major retailing and mail-order operation,has been in business for the past 10 years.During that time,its mail-order operations have grown from a sideline to represent more than 80 percent of the company's annual sales.Of course,the company has suffered growing pains.At times,overloaded or faulty computer programs resulted in lost sales.And scheduling temporary workers to augment the permanent staff during peak periods has always been a problem.Peter Bloom,manager of mail-order operations,has developed procedures for handling most problems.However,he is still trying to improve the scheduling of temporary workers to take customer telephone orders.Under the current system,Peter keeps a permanent staff of 60 employees who handle the base telephone workload and supplements this staff with temporary workers as needed.The temporary workers are hired on a daily basis;he determines the number needed for the next day the afternoon before based on his estimate of the upcoming telephone volume.Peter has decided to try regression analysis to improve the hiring of temporary workers.By summarizing the daily labor-hours into weekly totals for the past year,he determined the number of workers used each week.In addition,he listed the number of orders processed each week.After entering the data into a spreadsheet,Peter ran two regressions.Regression 1 related the total number of workers (permanent staff plus temporary workers)to the number of orders received.Regression 2 related only temporary workers to the number of orders received.The output of these analyses follows: Regression model: W = a + b * T where: W = workers;T = telephone orders
Degree of Wealth
A measure of the amount of financial assets or resources that an individual, family, or organization possesses.
Random Sequences
A series of numbers or symbols in which each element is generated without any predictable pattern or correlation with the other elements.
False Generalizations
Erroneous conclusions or statements that extend a specific case to all cases, often based on limited evidence or flawed logic.
Coincidence
The occurrence of two or more events at the same time by chance, without a causal connection between them.
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