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Displaying results 1-25 of 1352 results
For eBusiness & Channel Strategy Professionals
by Alexander Hesse, November 20, 2009
The Internet's role as a distribution channel for financial products is growing fast in the Netherlands. Nearly half of Dutch Net users researched at least one financial product online in the past year, compared with 40% in 2007, and one in five bought . . .
For eBusiness & Channel Strategy Professionals
by Brad Strothkamp, November 20, 2009
In 2008, the majority of US online adults who researched a financial product did so online, and the majority of those online researchers applied in a channel other than the Web. These cross-channel shoppers illustrate the importance of online-influenced . . .
For Consumer Product Strategy Professionals
by Julie A. Ask, Seth Fowler, November 19, 2009
Mobile is rapidly expanding as a medium for interacting with consumers, and it will only continue to do so. Many of Forrester's nontelecommunications clients — from the travel industry to consumer product goods to automotive companies to financial firms . . .
For Consumer Market Research Professionals
by Olesia Klevchuk, November 18, 2009
For the past four years, Forrester has been tracking consumers' online and offline behavior in Asia Pacific. This is a dedicated report about Asia Pacific consumers' online behavior aimed at understanding the changes in this emerging medium. This year's . . .
For Consumer Product Strategy Professionals
by Abe Garon, James L. McQuivey, Ph.D., November 17, 2009
Understanding how and why consumers experience the drive to adopt new products can help consumer product strategists trying to sell newer products. Concepts from academic psychology can be wedded to Forrester's Technographics segmentation to demonstrate . . .
For eBusiness & Channel Strategy Professionals
by Henry H. Harteveldt, Elizabeth Stark, November 16, 2009
Travel loyalty programs may be old news, but that old news pays the bills and generates revenue in the billions of dollars every year for travel companies. Forrester data shows that half — 52% — of all US online travelers actively use travel loyalty programs, . . .
For Marketing Leadership Professionals
by David Card, November 16, 2009
Google remains consumers' favorite online brand, with Yahoo! and Amazon not far behind. In the minds of their fans, the top online brands exhibit very traditional attributes such as trustworthiness, helpfulness, and relevance, all at the expense of more-predictable . . .
For Consumer Product Strategy Professionals
by Bobby Tulsiani, November 16, 2009
The pay-TV category is a nearly fully penetrated market, reaching 82% of US households today. With little room to increase the market, cable, satellite, and telecom TV providers are fighting an intense battle for market share. Forrester expects telecom . . .
For Consumer Product Strategy Professionals
by Sonal Gandhi, November 12, 2009
The amount of time that US adults spend listening to radio has been on the decline. The trend is especially marked among young adults, who have taken to other audio platforms at a much greater rate. But radio as a format continues to be popular even as . . .
For Vendor Strategy Professionals
by Jonathan Penn, November 12, 2009
As the nature of cyber threats has evolved, consumers' definition of security and their expectations of solutions have been changing as well. With the rise of account compromise and identity theft as a primary and highly profitable goal for hackers, protecting . . .
For Consumer Product Strategy Professionals
by Laurence Meyer, November 11, 2009
Connected TVs offer a huge advantage compared with legacy interactive TV and Internet TV platforms; they will also be in more than one-third of European TV households by 2014. With more than 150 million potential European users in 2014, connected TVs . . .
For Consumer Product Strategy Professionals
by Sarah Rotman Epps, November 10, 2009
Newspaper and magazine publishers' current monetization models are broken: They are overly reliant on the "free" model of having advertisers subsidize consumer usage. But shifting more of the burden of payment to consumers is no easy task. In this report, . . .
For Consumer Product Strategy Professionals
by Doug Williams, November 9, 2009
Nearly 16 million new US broadband subscribers will emerge over the next five years, but more than half of those will come in the next two years. Due to slowing organic growth, the Internet access market will be characterized by shifts across platforms. . . .
For Consumer Product Strategy Professionals
by Charles S. Golvin, Seth Fowler, November 6, 2009
Mobile phones and networks have reached near-ubiquity in the US. Despite a paucity of new subscribers to sell service to, mobile operators will continue to reap the benefits of the advance of their technology over the coming five years. Postpaid subscriptions . . .
For Consumer Product Strategy Professionals
by Bobby Tulsiani, November 6, 2009
In Forrester's 37-criteria evaluation of online video platform vendors, Brightcove and Ooyala lead the pack with their end-to-end product offerings that target organizations of all sizes. VMIX and Kaltura follow closely behind with comprehensive offerings . . .
For Consumer Product Strategy Professionals
by Mark Mulligan, November 6, 2009
The iPod heralded a new paradigm in music consumption, but it has done little to counter the impact of the CD's terminal decline; it may even have helped accelerate it. Although mobile music now looks set to start delivering on some of its promises, it . . .
For Marketing Leadership Professionals
by Steven Noble, November 6, 2009
Online consultation can range from the government's hosting an online discussion about policy issues to its co-authoring policy documents with its citizens. It's still a minority practice, but Australia has completed more than 100 online consultations . . .
For eBusiness & Channel Strategy Professionals
by Patti Freeman Evans, November 5, 2009
Sixty-eight percent of the top 50 Internet retailers use video content on their Web sites, compared with 18% in 2008. Online retailers are committed to making product videos central to their merchandising and marketing strategies because of the positive . . .
For eBusiness & Channel Strategy Professionals
by Lauriane Camus, Patti Freeman Evans, November 5, 2009
There is no longer a clear purchase path for consumers. Thirty-nine percent of European consumers begin their research process online when making a considered purchase. Those consumers who begin their research process online are also likely to ultimately . . .
For Consumer Market Research Professionals
by Jacqueline Anderson, November 5, 2009
This highlight deck summarizes the key findings related to incidence, interest and barriers to mobile investing. This is the first survey highlight in a series from the North American Technographics Investments And Insurance Online Survey, Q3 2009 (US).
For Consumer Market Research Professionals
by Joost van Kruijsdijk, November 5, 2009
This highlight deck summarizes the key findings related to devices and bundling from Forrester's North American Technographics Telecom And Devices Online Survey, Q3 2009 (Canada). This is the second survey highlight in a series from the North American . . .
For eBusiness & Channel Strategy Professionals
by Patti Freeman Evans, Lauriane Camus, November 4, 2009
This year, the crucial run-up to Christmas shows more optimism compared with last year. Still, consumer sentiment remains fragile, and most retailers remain cautious: Most European Net users are worried about the state of the economy and their own personal . . .
For Consumer Product Strategy Professionals
by Nick Thomas, November 4, 2009
Despite widespread gloom, it appears that European Internet users are willing to pay for certain kinds of online content, including music, movies, and eBooks, although none of these markets is anywhere near maturity. Understanding how and where current . . .
For Consumer Market Research Professionals
by Ina Mitskaviets, November 2, 2009
Online boomers comprise more than one-third of the online population in the US and wield significant purchasing power online because of their higher household income levels, employment status, and occupations. Largely explained by their age bracket, boomers . . .
For Consumer Product Strategy Professionals
by Paul Jackson, October 30, 2009
Augmented reality has emerged from the shadows in the past six months as fun consumer applications move beyond dedicated Webcam software and academic experiments. The widespread availability of applications for mobile handsets has driven augmented reality . . .
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