GMAT考试写作指导:Issue写作范文二六

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GMAT考试写作指导:Issue写作范文二六

  26. In retail, or storefront, business, location is still a key ingredient of business

  success. The extent to which this will continue to be true, given the inexorable growth

  of Internet commerce, will vary among industries.

  In more traditional retail sectors, such as clothing, cosmetics, and home

  improvement, an in-person visit to a retail store is often necessary―to try on clothes for

  fit, compare fragrances, or browse among a full selection of textures, colors, and styles.

  Also, activities such as shopping and dining out are for many consumers enjoyable

  experiences in themselves, as well as excuses to get out of the house and mingle with

  others in their community. Finally, shipping costs for large items such as appliances and

  home-improvement items render home shopping impracticable. Thus, burgeoning

  technologies pose no serious threat to Main Street, and location will continue to play a

  pivotal role in the fate of many retail businesses.

  Nevertheless, technology-related industries are sure to move away from physical

  storefronts to virtual ones. Products that can be reduced to digital bits and bites, such

  as books and magazines, recordings, and software applications, are more efficiently

  distributed electronically. Computer hardware will not disappear from Main Street quite

  so quickly, though, since its physical look and feel enters into the buying decision.

  Computer superstores should continue to thrive alongside companies such as Dell,

  which does not distribute through retail stores.

  In conclusion, consumer demand for convenient location will continue with

  respect to certain tangible products, while for other products alternative distribution

  systems will gradually replace the storefront, rendering location an obsolete issue.-

  

  

  26. In retail, or storefront, business, location is still a key ingredient of business

  success. The extent to which this will continue to be true, given the inexorable growth

  of Internet commerce, will vary among industries.

  In more traditional retail sectors, such as clothing, cosmetics, and home

  improvement, an in-person visit to a retail store is often necessary―to try on clothes for

  fit, compare fragrances, or browse among a full selection of textures, colors, and styles.

  Also, activities such as shopping and dining out are for many consumers enjoyable

  experiences in themselves, as well as excuses to get out of the house and mingle with

  others in their community. Finally, shipping costs for large items such as appliances and

  home-improvement items render home shopping impracticable. Thus, burgeoning

  technologies pose no serious threat to Main Street, and location will continue to play a

  pivotal role in the fate of many retail businesses.

  Nevertheless, technology-related industries are sure to move away from physical

  storefronts to virtual ones. Products that can be reduced to digital bits and bites, such

  as books and magazines, recordings, and software applications, are more efficiently

  distributed electronically. Computer hardware will not disappear from Main Street quite

  so quickly, though, since its physical look and feel enters into the buying decision.

  Computer superstores should continue to thrive alongside companies such as Dell,

  which does not distribute through retail stores.

  In conclusion, consumer demand for convenient location will continue with

  respect to certain tangible products, while for other products alternative distribution

  systems will gradually replace the storefront, rendering location an obsolete issue.-