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First Monday of April - how is the year going by so fast? In this episode Kathryn and Michelle are joined by a very special guest, Nick Thomas. You can look forward to them discussing about the market research industry, publications and more. Nick Thomas would describe himself in a Twee, which is 280 characters as I'm happily married and the proud father of two boys aged 5 and 9, living in Surrey, UK; overeater and underachiever; jack of all trades bored by doing any one thing for too long. Founder and owner of MrWeb Ltd which publishes DRNO, the global insight industry's only 'proper' daily paper. If want to read the full spread of MRWeb's collaboration with HCD Research follow this link | https://online.flippingbook.com/view/1040202418/ Kathryn on LinkedIn | https://bit.ly/Kathryn_LinkedIn_YTCaption Michelle on LinkedIn | https://bit.ly/Michelle_LinkedIn_YTCaption Nick Thomas on LinkedIn | https://www.linkedin.com/in/nick-thomas-b1513821a/ MRWeb on LinkedIn | https://www.linkedin.com/company/mrweb-ltd/ Tweet at MRWeb | @mrwebnews Contact Email for MRWeb | hello@mrweb.com Coming Soon for MRWeb! Next Feature Issue | Insight in the Mobile Age, June Next News Issue | Tonight and Every Weekday Night! HCD Research Website | https://bit.ly/HCDI_Website MindSet Website Page | https://bit.ly/MindSet_Website HCD Newsletter | https://bit.ly/HCDNewsletter_SignUp YouTube - @HCDResearchInc. LinkedIn - @HCDResearch Twitter - @HCDNeuroscience Twitter - @HCDResearchInc Facebook - @HCDResearch Instagram - @HCDResearch MindSet is excited to have each and everyone one of you join our curious conversations! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/mindset-hcd-research/message
Today we meet with Chief Operating Officer at UJET, Vasili Triant, and we talk about how companies have been adapting to the age of the mobile phone. Vasili tells us that people have been saying voice is going to die out since the late 90's, but the reality is that all channels have been on the rise, meaning even demand for voice interactions is increasing. Vasili tells us about how they interact with their consumers and what UJET is doing to collect their data and take care of them based on their needs. Does voice have a place in today's market? 1:42The big challenges that contact centers are facing now 3:37Why some companies haven't been able to change 7:20How UJET is solving current problems 18:24“The biggest thing frankly is, where are consumers today? They're on their smartphones, they're on web, and meet them where they're at. So we essentially embed the connectivity between a consumer brand and their app, and we don't make the consumer go outside of it.” 19:30https://www.linkedin.com/in/vasilitriant/
This episode is in partnership with MrWeb’s Insight in the Mobile Age segment. My guest today is Chris Havemann, CEO of RealityMine. Founded in 2012, RealityMine is a passive metering technology, enabling the tracking of consumers on multiple devices—across all major platforms—providing a holistic view of their daily lives. Headquartered in Manchester, England, with offices in London and Sydney. Prior to joining RealityMine, Chris was the CEO of Rated People and the co-founder and CEO of Research Now. Find Chris Online: Website: https://www.realitymine.com/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/chris-havemann-19a04b8/ Find Jamin Online: Email: jamin@happymr.com LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/jaminbrazil Twitter: www.twitter.com/jaminbrazil Find Us Online: Twitter: www.twitter.com/happymrxp LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/happymarketresearch Facebook: www.facebook.com/happymrxp Website: www.happymr.com Music:“Clap Along” by Auditionauti: https://audionautix.com [00:00:00] Jamin: Hi, I'm Jamin Brazil. You're listening to the Happy Market Research Podcast. My guest today is Chris Havemann, CEO of RealityMine. Founded in 2012, RealityMine is a passive metering technology enabling the tracking of consumers on multiple devices across all major platforms, providing a holistic view of their daily lives. RealityMine is headquartered in Manchester, England with offices in London and Sydney. Prior to joining RealityMine, Chris was the CEO of Rated People and the cofounder and CEO of Research Now. Chris, thank you so much for joining me on the Happy Market Research Podcast. [00:00:37] Chris: My pleasure, Jamin. Great to be here. [00:00:40] Jamin: So I'd like to start out with a little bit of context as usual. Maybe you could tell us a little bit about your parents and how they inform what you do today. [00:00:47] Chris: It's a really interesting question. Without wishing to disrespect my parents, just to give you an idea, my mom was a housewife and my stepdad was a university professor. And in fact, I don't think I do take much inspiration career-wise from what they did. If anything, I think my inspiration comes from my grandfather, who was a self-made entrepreneur. The only boss he ever had, he says - he used to say was the RAF during the second World War. And I think that seeded somewhere in me an entrepreneurial gene that led to me cofounding Research Now and other things in the world of market research. [00:01:24] Jamin: Did you spend a lot of time with your grandfather? [00:01:27] Chris: Yes, I did. I actually left my parents' home on my 15th birthday. At the time we were living in Canada, and I moved across the Atlantic back to where I was born in England. And I lived with my grandparents, so my sort of formative teenage years or late teenage years were living with my grandparents. [00:01:42] Jamin: That's super interesting because I have a similar story. It's not about me, sorry, but just from a connection perspective, I did a similar thing where I moved out of my parents' in my mid-teens and in with my grandparents. And my grandfather was instrumental in my life in a very similar way as an entrepreneur, and he had his hands in lots of different things from garden farming to farmers market-type things to dairies, importing and exporting and whatnot. And so is very - I think that the entrepreneurial gene for me really came from his mentorship, and yes. So was he part of or around when you started Research Now? [00:02:33] Chris: Yes, he was. He's dead now because we started Research Now, myself and Andrew Cooper way back in 2000 actually, or 2003 when we rebranded as Research Now. And he was alive for about another seven or eight years after that, so he saw the early struggle, which I think all entrepreneurs go through. But also, I'm very pleased to be conscious that he also saw the early successes,
This episode is in partnership with MrWeb’s Insight in the Mobile Age segment. My guest today is Giles Palmer, Founder and CEO of Brandwatch. Founded in 2007, Brandwatch is a global enterprise social intelligence company. It allows users to analyze and utilize conversations from across the social web. Brandwatch employs more than 500 people. Giles is also the Chairman of Futrli, an SMB focused software company. Prior to founding Brandwatch, Giles founded the Runtime Collective, a software company. And, he started his career in accounting. Find Giles Online: Website: https://www.overtheshoulder.com/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ross-mclean-9766842/ Find Jamin Online: Email: jamin@happymr.com LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/jaminbrazil Twitter: www.twitter.com/jaminbrazil Find Us Online: Twitter: www.twitter.com/happymrxp LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/happymarketresearch Facebook: www.facebook.com/happymrxp Website: www.happymr.com Music:“Clap Along” by Auditionauti: https://audionautix.com [00:00:00] Jamin: Hi, everybody, I'm Jamin. You're listening to the Happy Market Research Podcast. My guest today is Giles Palmer, founder and CEO of Brandwatch. Founded in 2007, Brandwatch is a global enterprise social intelligence company. It allows users to analyze and utilize conversations from across the social web. Brandwatch employs more than 500 people. Giles is also the chairman of Futrli, an S&B-focused software company. Prior to founding Brandwatch, Giles founded the Runtime Collective, a software company, and he started his career in accounting. Giles, thank you so much for joining on the Happy Market Research Podcast today. [00:00:42] Giles: It's a pleasure to be here, Jamin. [00:00:43] Jamin: Let's start with a little bit of context. Tell us about your parents and how they informed what you're doing today. [00:00:51] Giles: Yeah, my parents were - well, my dad is no longer alive. My mom is. They were kind of a traditional stay-at-home mom, working dad family. My dad had a very high work ethic. He came from a working-class background. He was kind of a smart guy that did OK at school. And eventually got into quantity surveying. So, kind of geeky surveying. And joined a firm when he was, I think, 27. And retired from the same firm when he was 55. And he worked his way up to senior partner. So, he just kind of grounded out in the same industry for 30-odd years. And just worked really hard. And didn't put too much pressure on me and my sister to work hard when we were kids. In fact, I often asked him for advice, and he was reluctant to give me any advice. He was kind of like, you've just got to figure it out for yourself, Giles. I went to a private school, I went to a good university. I read physics at University, I came out of that. I was bumped up a year at school, so I came out pretty young. And I was trying to figure out what I was going to do with my life. I had no idea about anything at that point. I was kind of 21. So, a little bit like studying law in the US, you can go into British grads often - certainly back then, in the early '90s, went into accountancy to get a kind of a general business grounding. So, I went and did that. I was really not very good at it. My heart wasn't in it. And then I kind of joined a few industries, I explored a few different industries. Didn't really get on with any of those. I was a geeky kid. I was into computer games and programming and stuff. And I kind of got - the Internet really didn't appear until I was in my late 20s. And when it did, I kind of - me and some friends started up a company, which we call Runtime Collective, building web applications for people. But in terms of my parents' influence on me, I think if I could take one thing out of that, it would be work ethic. I was kind of a lazy kid. I found schoolwork incredibly boring, but I could do it reasonably well.
This episode is in partnership with MrWeb’s Insight in the Mobile Age segment and was recorded in February 2020. My guest today is Ross McLean, Co-Founder, Executive Director at Over the Shoulder. Over the Shoulder was founded in 2010 as a qualitative technology platform for diary-like studies. On December 9th, 2019, Over the Shoulder announced its sell to 20|20. 20|20 is headquartered in Nashville, with an office in Denver and top-rated qualitative facilities in Nashville, Charlotte, and Miami. Prior to co-founding OTS, Ross worked on the marketing agency side where he oversaw brand strategy on brands including Kraft Mac & Cheese, Jello, Lunchables, Kentucky Fried Chicken, and State Farm. Find Ross Online: Website: https://www.overtheshoulder.com/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ross-mclean-9766842/ Find Jamin Online: Email: jamin@happymr.com LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/jaminbrazil Twitter: www.twitter.com/jaminbrazil Find Us Online: Twitter: www.twitter.com/happymrxp LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/happymarketresearch Facebook: www.facebook.com/happymrxp Website: www.happymr.com Music: “Clap Along” by Auditionauti: https://audionautix.com [00:00:03] Jamin: Hi, I'm Jamin. You're listening to the Happy Market Research Podcast. My guest today is Ross McLean, co-founder, executive director at Over the Shoulder. Over the Shoulder was founded in 2010 as a qualitative technology platform for diary-like studies. On December 9th, 2019, Over the Shoulder announced its sell to 20/20. 20/20 is headquartered in Nashville with an office in Denver and top-rated qualitative facilities in Nashville, Charlotte, and Miami. Prior to co-founding OTS or Over the Shoulder, Ross worked on the marketing agency side, where he oversaw brand agency strategies for big companies, including Kraft Mac & Cheese, Jello, Lunchables, Kentucky Fried Chicken, and State Farm. Ross, thanks so much for joining me on the Happy Market Research Podcast today. [00:00:53] Ross: Thank you for having me. Very happy to be here. [00:00:58] Jamin: This episode is brought to you by Survey Monkey. Today, almost everyone has taken a survey, but did you know that Survey Monkey offers complete solutions for market researchers? In addition to flexible surveys, their global audience panel and research services. Survey Monkey has launched a fast and easy way to collect market feedback. They have seven new expert solutions for concept and creative testing. With built in customized methodologies, AI powered insights, and industry benchmarking, you can get feedback on your ideas from your target market in a presentation ready format, and by the way, in as little as an hour. For more information on Survey Monkey's market research solutions, visit surveymonkey.com/market-research. That's surveymonkey.com/market-research. Mention the Happy Market Research Podcast to the Survey Monkey sales team before June 30th for a discount off your first project. So we like to start out with this context question. Tell us a little bit about your parents and how they informed what you're doing today. [00:02:10] Ross: Yes. So I read ahead, and I knew this question was coming, so I thought about it a little bit. So my dad, he was a marketing guy for a big company in Canada, and I think I learned a lot through just observations and hearing his stories and hearing him discuss what that world was sort of like and how it worked. But I think, you know, I tried to boil it down a little bit more, and I think the thing that affected me most that he taught me was probably empathy. He was very, very big on hold your temper. Don't ever judge anyone until you've walked a mile in their shoes, and you really need to understand the perspective of somebody else, even if it's difficult, even if it's kind of objectionable, so that you can understand where their head's at, and you can go forward.
Professor Niall Hayes of Lancaster University talks about the Mobile Age app on Radio Cumbria. Mobile Age encourages older people to break down their social isolation by planning itineraries of visits, entertainment and social events.
MONEY FM 89.3 - Prime Time with Howie Lim, Bernard Lim & Finance Presenter JP Ong
SilverPush’s Karthik Metha on how digital marketers can rethink consumer engagement using AI.
Launching a Mobile Age for the Ocean Economy with Matt Mulrennan, Director of the Ocean Initiative at the XPRIZE Foundation. Learn about how the XPRIZE Ocean Initiative is inspiring solutions to the oceans grand challenges. Hear from winning teams in XPRIZE's Big Ocean Button Challenge – a mobile app development competition to turn ocean data into the services we need. Modertated by Matt Mulrennan Panelists: Jonsen Carmack, SeaStatus & Nik Strong-Cvetich, Save The Waves Coalition
The NFL is a TV ratings juggernaut: 19 of the 20 most-viewed broadcasts in U.S. history are Super Bowls. But the league is facing new challenges to its dominance in the age of mobile video, at the same time as America's Game has become a cultural flashpoint. The NFL's head of digital, Maryann Turcke, explains how she dealt with player protests, covered off-the-field controversies, and tried to keep the focus on football during a tumultuous year for the league.
Margaret Finan, and her startup "If Then Giving," are aiming to shake up the concept of giving to charity. Using the concept of if then statements, the Buffalo startup develop the concept of situational giving. IF a certain criteria is met, THEN I will give money automatically. Can it work? We spoke to Finan to find out.
In this discussion, McKinsey's Brian Gregg speaks with Michael Jones (RetailMeNot), Mahin Samadani (McKinsey Digital Labs), Dianne Esber (McKinsey), and Mark Phillips (McKinsey) about how customer experience has changed in the mobile age. Read more > Listen to the podcast (duration: 20:16) >
In this discussion, McKinsey's Brian Gregg speaks with Michael Jones (RetailMeNot), Mahin Samadani (McKinsey Digital Labs), Dianne Esber (McKinsey), and Mark Phillips (McKinsey) about how customer experience has changed in the mobile age. Read more > Listen to the podcast (duration: 20:16) >
In this discussion, McKinsey's Brian Gregg speaks with Michael Jones (RetailMeNot), Mahin Samadani (McKinsey Digital Labs), Dianne Esber (McKinsey), and Mark Phillips (McKinsey) about how customer experience has changed in the mobile age. Read more > Listen to the podcast (duration: 20:16) >
Host: Alicia A. Sutton From the floors of the Alliance for Continuing Education in the Health Professions' annual meeting in Washington DC, host Alicia Sutton welcomes Michael Baffuto, President of Integrity CE. The two discuss new and emerging design platforms for medical education, leveraging mobile technologies to increase engagement, learning, and positive clinical change.
In the 20th episode, the iPhone Life team tackles the difficult dynamics of parenting in the mobile age. Other topics include experiences with tap and wait gaming, evolving iPhone 5e rumors, and some exciting features that will soon be delived in iOS 9.3.
Ming-Hsiang Tsou, Ph.D. Professor, Geography Department San Diego State University and Founding Director, Center for Human Dynamics in the Mobile Age talks about using geo-location data from Tweets to identify early outbreaks of the flu, beginning to use mapping and spatial analysis in cancer research, and combining electronic medical records with GIS tools to improve population health. @MingTsou SocialMedia.SDSU.edu Esri
Healthcare Tech Talk- Exploring how technology can help meet the challenges in Healthcare.
During HIMSS15 we were lucky to sit down with Health IT professionals that are busy every day trying to meet the needs of their healthcare organizations. Our guest participated in the panel "IT as a Stragic Imperative for Healthcare Providers in the Digital, Mobile age" sponsored by Citrix. The panel description: Join Citrix and our guest panel as we explore how some of the most innovative health systems are leveraging mobility, virtualization, and cloud services to gain the agility and efficiency needed to unleash innovation and create a more patient-centered healthcare approach in order to succeed in today’s changing healthcare landscape. Visit us at www.HealthcareTechTalk.net Twitter https://twitter.com/Healthtechtalkn LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/company/healthcare-tech-talk?trk=biz-companies-cym
UNTETHER.tv - Mobile strategy and tactics (video) | Pervasive Computing | Internet of things
The privacy issue has been slowly bludgeoned to death since we first set foot on digital soil yet slowly but surely we have all given up parts of it for different reasons. The fact is that we all have a price in mind when someone asks us for our personal information - it could be a latte or a discount or a new car - there is a threshold where "no" becomes "yes" and the price is our privacy. Perhaps we have come to accept the truth that privacy as we knew it is dead but why should we accept the current value affixed to it by others? Why should someone else determine that on our behalf? Instead of accepting that our privacy is dead or to wrestle for control of it in an ever-connected world, why not change the rules of how information is shared and what the value IS of that information? In our 3rd prediction we contemplate the future of privacy and how we may be able to arm ourselves for what is to come while, perhaps, earning revenue from sharing what is rightfully ours.
Mobile Marketing Minute with Rob Woodbridge and Greg Hickman
The privacy issue has been slowly bludgeoned to death since we first set foot on digital soil yet slowly but surely we have all given up parts of it for different reasons. The fact is that we all have a price in mind when someone asks us for our personal information - it could be a latte or a discount or a new car - there is a threshold where "no" becomes "yes" and the price is our privacy. Perhaps we have come to accept the truth that privacy as we knew it is dead but why should we accept the current value affixed to it by others? Why should someone else determine that on our behalf? Instead of accepting that our privacy is dead or to wrestle for control of it in an ever-connected world, why not change the rules of how information is shared and what the value IS of that information? In our 3rd prediction we contemplate the future of privacy and how we may be able to arm ourselves for what is to come while, perhaps, earning revenue from sharing what is rightfully ours.
你有没有觉得自己这几年用手机拍的照片比相机拍的数量越来越多?你有没有觉得很多自己用手机拍的照片比用相机拍的效果要好?你有没有越来越懒得带相机出门?如果你对这些问题的回答都是肯定的,那么今天这期节目,就是为了你准备的啦。“轻摄影”不只是指手机摄影,它是指使用轻便、普及、便宜的设备进行创作,更是指有着轻松随意的乐拍心态。在这个民用工具与专业设备在参数上的区别越来越不明显的时代,影响我们创作的,早就不再是你手里的设备的性能,而是拿着设备的你本人,你的见解、经验、观察力和美感,才是关键的东西。 Do you use mobile phone for photo-shooting more often then camera? Do you think the photos from your mobile phone look better than the ones from camera? Do you always take mobile phone out for shooting instead of camera? If you do, this episode is the one for you. The light weight photography is not just shooting photos by mobile phone, it's about using light, common and cheap equipment and an easy mind to create something. The function of the equipment is not that important now, you, your mind, your experience, your observation and your aesthetic, these are the really matter things.
Grocery stores are important to us. They are often a part of our neighbourhoods. We visit them regularly and often. We are loyal. The thing is that we also want from our grocery stores the same things we want from the other retailers we frequent. Grocery stores have an incredible opportunity because of the nature of their business but they cannot rest and let the mobile opportunity pass them by. That would be catastrophic to their business. This latest PWC study shows what we want as consumers from our grocery stores. Chuck highlights some of the key findings in 2 minutes here.
Mobile health or mHealth is part of a movement towards citizen-centered health services delivered through cellular technologies. Mobile phones in particular are becoming a first line of defense against emerging infectious diseases by keeping healthcare practitioners and the public informed about outbreaks. For individuals mHealth technologies can provide real-time monitoring of vital signs and even deliver treatment services in the form of risk assessments, medication regimens and doctor appointment reminders. In addition, this new technology also has the potential to supply researchers and public health officials with up-to-date community and clinical health data. In episode 34 of MicrobeWorld Video, we talk with William Warshauer about the work he's doing with Voxiva, a company that specializes in interactive mobile health information services. By leveraging the web, email, text messaging, interactive voice response systems and smart phone apps, he hopes to stay one step ahead of infectious disease outbreaks wherever they may occur. We also speak with Amy Sonricker from Healthmap.org about their unique web interface and iPhone application that allows for real-time viewing and reporting of disease-related events around the globe. This episode of MicrobeWorld Video was filmed in October 2009 at the Marian Koshland Science Museum in Washington, D.C., at one of their frequent events for the public. For more information about the Koshland Museum, upcoming events and online resources visit them online at www.koshland-science.org. mHealth Resources United Nations Foundation - mHealth for Development: The Opportunity of Mobile Technology for Healthcare in the Developing World (.pdf) mobihealthnews.com www.mobih.org mHealth on Wikipedia
Mobile health or mHealth is part of a movement towards citizen-centered health services delivered through cellular technologies. Mobile phones in particular are becoming a first line of defense against emerging infectious diseases by keeping healthcare practitioners and the public informed about outbreaks. For individuals mHealth technologies can provide real-time monitoring of vital signs and even deliver treatment services in the form of risk assessments, medication regimens and doctor appointment reminders. In addition, this new technology also has the potential to supply researchers and public health officials with up-to-date community and clinical health data. In episode 34 of MicrobeWorld Video, we talk with William Warshauer about the work he's doing with Voxiva, a company that specializes in interactive mobile health information services. By leveraging the web, email, text messaging, interactive voice response systems and smart phone apps, he hopes to stay one step ahead of infectious disease outbreaks wherever they may occur. We also speak with Amy Sonricker from Healthmap.org about their unique web interface and iPhone application that allows for real-time viewing and reporting of disease-related events around the globe. This episode of MicrobeWorld Video was filmed in October 2009 at the Marian Koshland Science Museum in Washington, D.C., at one of their frequent events for the public. For more information about the Koshland Museum, upcoming events and online resources visit them online at www.koshland-science.org. mHealth Resources United Nations Foundation - mHealth for Development: The Opportunity of Mobile Technology for Healthcare in the Developing World (.pdf) mobihealthnews.com www.mobih.org mHealth on Wikipedia
Mobile health or mHealth is part of a movement towards citizen-centered health services delivered through cellular technologies. Mobile phones in particular are becoming a first line of defense against emerging infectious diseases by keeping healthcare practitioners and the public informed about outbreaks. For individuals mHealth technologies can provide real-time monitoring of vital signs and even deliver treatment services in the form of risk assessments, medication regimens and doctor appointment reminders. In addition, this new technology also has the potential to supply researchers and public health officials with up-to-date community and clinical health data. In episode 34 of MicrobeWorld Video, we talk with William Warshauer about the work he's doing with Voxiva, a company that specializes in interactive mobile health information services. By leveraging the web, email, text messaging, interactive voice response systems and smart phone apps, he hopes to stay one step ahead of infectious disease outbreaks wherever they may occur. We also speak with Amy Sonricker from Healthmap.org about their unique web interface and iPhone application that allows for real-time viewing and reporting of disease-related events around the globe. This episode of MicrobeWorld Video was filmed in October 2009 at the Marian Koshland Science Museum in Washington, D.C., at one of their frequent events for the public. For more information about the Koshland Museum, upcoming events and online resources visit them online at www.koshland-science.org. mHealth Resources United Nations Foundation - mHealth for Development: The Opportunity of Mobile Technology for Healthcare in the Developing World (.pdf) mobihealthnews.com www.mobih.org mHealth on Wikipedia