09 Sep 2005
of 93 per cent of PROs in all age groups thought they
would still be in PR in a year's time, only 66 per cent of 22 to
25-year-olds said they would definitely be in PR in five years' time.
Sixty-eight per ...
02 Sep 2005
| by Anthony Hilton, City commentator on London's Evening Standardanthony.hilton@haynet.com
themselves time to
deal in the shares before the rest of the market has woken up. Others are simply more ...
12 Aug 2005
| by Ian Hall
. The Hospital Readership Survey, undertaken for the first time this year,
polled around 1,090 doctors across 28 ...
15 Apr 2005
| by Donna Werbner
. It overtook rival Asda in terms of market share gain for the first time in a decade.
Reputation Monitor ...
28 Jan 2005
| by Stephanie Siegle
at the junior to middle-management end of the scale, it is too early to say it is returning to the boom times ...
Dale sums up the current employment market: 'The B2B technology sector is returning to better times. We ...
.
The Red Consultancy is just one of the consultancies doing this. 'Pay can be increased at any time, rather ...
03 Dec 2004
| by Mary Cowlett
, there are certain ways of getting polls wrong. Financial Times UK affairs editor Roger Blitz estimates that he ...
-to-face questioning, with firms such as NOP World quoting a turnaround time of two days and a starting price of around ...
certain questions,' he says. 'But online subscribers can complete surveys in their own time, which tends ...
22 Oct 2004
's claims are realistic: 'Why should clients spend time doing something that's not their day job?'
Biss ...
database of agencies, which features case studies, people profiles and client lists.
Saving time ...
unfamiliar with the machinations of PR.
The biggest benefit of intermediaries is the amount of time ...