Sites Listed Under 'Outsourcing Research' Category

Global Research & Data Services: Construction Machinery

The Finish based publisher Global Research & Data Services has published several new reports concerning the market for construction machinery in 10 different European countries. These market analyses give a clear overview of the actual situation and future outlook of the construction machinery market in the corresponding countries. The subjects discussed in the market analyses include: (more…)

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Global Research & Data Services: Construction Machinery

NY Times Coverage of NSF/Microsoft Cloud Computing Research Agreement

John Markoff of the NY Times has coverage of today’s announcement of an agreement between the National Science Foundation and Microsoft that would enable NSF-sponsored researchers free access to Microsoft’s Azure cloud computing services. According to NSF CISE AD Jeannette Wing, NSF will commit $5 million in funding to enable researchers to study new techniques

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NY Times Coverage of NSF/Microsoft Cloud Computing Research Agreement

Crowdsourcing influence: how can you leverage it?

High quality content is being developed cheap or free in almost every niche of publishing. Both start-ups like Yelp! and mainstream publishing firms are able to get crowdsourced content, and in that way drive down costs and drive up quality. I’ve found myself in three discussions on this theme over the last week: at at number

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Crowdsourcing influence: how can you leverage it?

Cybersecurity Research on House Floor Today

The House of Representatives will consider H.R. 4061, the Cyber Security Enhancement Act, today. The bill, which originated in the House Science and Technology Committee, is designed to “improve the security of cyberspace by ensuring federal investments in cybersecurity are better focused, more effective, and that research into innovative, transformative technologies is supported.” It’s actually

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Cybersecurity Research on House Floor Today

FY 11 Budget: National Science Foundation

As we noted yesterday, the National Science Foundation does very well in President’s Obama FY 11 Budget Request. The President’s plan would provide an 8 percent increase to the agency, $552 million more than the agency’s FY 10 budget. Of that $552 million, $455 million would go to the Foundation’s research accounts (also an 8

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FY 11 Budget: National Science Foundation

DOE FY2011 Budget Details

The President’s Budget Request (PBR) included a 6.8%increase in the overall budget of the Department of Energy for FY2011, for a total budget of $28.4 billion. Both President Obama in his recent State of the Union address and Secretary of Energy Chu at the budget briefing emphasized the necessity of funding research to fulfill our future

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DOE FY2011 Budget Details

FY 11 Budget: First Look Looks Good!

Despite some early concerns in the science community over some dicey reported funding levels for some key science agencies, the President’s FY 2011 budget, released today, demonstrates a continued commitment to doubling the budgets of the National Science Foundation, Department of Energy’s Office of Science, and the National Institute of Standards and Technology. Here’s some relevant bits. We’ll have more as we plow through it and get briefed by the relevant agencies.

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FY 11 Budget: First Look Looks Good!

Praxmarer: Five steps for clients when analyst firms get bought

Thanks go to Experton board member Luis Praxmarer, who previously managed META Group in Europe, for sharing his insight on what clients should do when an analyst firm is acquired.  While these comments are especially useful for clients of AMR Research and Burton Group, both recently bought by Gartner, the same guidance can apply to

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Praxmarer: Five steps for clients when analyst firms get bought

To Gartner, Burton is better off dead

[One of the attendees at the Lighthouse-InformationSpan webinar to discuss Gartner’s purchase of Burton sent us these comments]. To Gartner, Burton is just better off dead. Not as much from the research that Burton published than from the “enterprise-wide” model. That is a real impact on the way that Gartner, and a lot of others

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To Gartner, Burton is better off dead

Who should be responsible for social media?

Not influencer relations or analyst relations, but mainstream marketing communications should manage your firm’s social media. That’s the outcome of a small-scale poll we ran over the last half of 2009. Our unscientific survey aimed to gather some opinions, and the overall view is that social media need to be centralised rather than in a

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Who should be responsible for social media?

AR evaluation webinar: How AR can integrate into marketing metrics

Analyst- and influencer-relations means are coming under increasing pressure to produce metrics that evaluate their performance. One of the increasing challenges for top marketing managers is to show the impact of all activities on financial consequences.That’s the topic we’ll be discussing in a Lighthouse webinar on January 21st. AR managers are often in functional silos. Clearly

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AR evaluation webinar: How AR can integrate into marketing metrics

AMR/Burton clients: don’t drop your guard

What are the first signs of change at AMR Research in the wake of its purchase by Gartner? How does it bode for Burton Group? In this guest post by Dr Tony Law, the InformationSpan CEO summarises Gartner’s recent AR Community call, with its update on both the Burton and AMR acquisitions. From the point of

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AMR/Burton clients: don’t drop your guard

Join our Gartner-Burton webinar to hear insider opinion

Advance note: Lighthouse Analyst Relations and InformationSpan are scheduling a free webcast to explore the implications of Gartner’s acquisition of Burton Group. There will be actions for enterprise IT users who either (a) are Burton clients, and need to work out what’s going to happen to their service; or (b) are Gartner clients and may

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Join our Gartner-Burton webinar to hear insider opinion

Gartner’s purchase of Burton is a ‘double-whammy’, so the fight’s for second place

Gartner’s purchase of Burton Group continues the M&A process flowing through the analyst industry under the impact of the recession. The initial analysis that I found most interesting was by Phil Fersht. As always, Carter had a good summary of the bits and bytes. I don’t think Gartner “needed” Burton but I think it is a

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Gartner’s purchase of Burton is a ‘double-whammy’, so the fight’s for second place

Datamonitor: McDonald’s – US sales dampen overall growth

Despite reporting a slight increase in overall sales for November, McDonald’s financial results also showed some declines in key markets. The company’s US sales fell for the third consecutive month, while sales in China also suffered a slump after previously robust growth. McDonald’s will need to act quickly in order to ensure that these downwards trends do not become established. (more…)

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Datamonitor: McDonald’s – US sales dampen overall growth

Datamonitor: Lilly to introduce new smaller insulin vial in US

Eli Lilly and Company has announced the availability of a smaller insulin vial containing 3ml of insulin, for people with diabetes being treated in a hospital, in the US. The new smaller vial – for the comapny’s Humalog and Humulin R-U100 – is intended to provide hospitals more flexibility when evaluating insulin storage, delivery and distribution options. (more…)

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Datamonitor: Lilly to introduce new smaller insulin vial in US

Datamonitor: Volkswagen to hire 1,300 workers in India

German auto major Volkswagen intends to hire around 1,300 workers by the end of 2010 at its Chakan manufacturing facility near Pune, India, reported Bloomberg. The manufacturing plant, established with an investment of around $860 million, reportedly employs 1,200 workers. According to the news source, the Chakan plant had begun production of Skoda Fabia hatchback in May 2009 and will commence production of Volkswagen Polo supermini car in the near future. (more…)

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Datamonitor: Volkswagen to hire 1,300 workers in India

Quick Update: NSF and NIST Fare Well in FY 10 Final Approps Bill

The House and Senate Appropriators are in their end game on the FY 10 appropriations process and yesterday released the “conference agreement” for an omnibus appropriations bill they’ve created that bundles all the outstanding appropriations bills save one (Defense). Included in the conference bill are the agreed upon funding levels for several key science agencies. NSF and NIST seem to do well.

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Quick Update: NSF and NIST Fare Well in FY 10 Final Approps Bill

ScienceWorksForUS Launch

ScienceWorksForUS, a joint effort by the Association of American Universities (AAU), the Association of Public and Land-grant Universities (APLU), and The Science Coalition (TSC), launched today on Capitol Hill with Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) in attendance. The interesting and much needed initiative is designed to illustrate how the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA) funding is supporting research across the country and how that research impacts the nation economically, both in the short and long term. The website of the initiative gives researchers a chance to tell their stories and to share their research with a wider public audience. As we’ve mentioned here before, the ARRA included over $21 billion in science funding, including money to build research facilities, buy equipment, and conduct research. The immediate impact is to continue or increase employment of researchers, equipment manufacturers, and facility construction workers. However, the long-term impact will be more,…

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ScienceWorksForUS Launch

FY 10 Appropriations Update: Energy, NSF, NIST, Defense

We’re in the end game for the FY 2010 appropriations, but no one is really sure exactly how this will end (though there are some good theories). While a number of bills have actually passed through regular order — including, most relevantly for the computing research community, the Energy and Water appropriations bill, which contains funding for the DOE’s Office of Science — an equal number of key bills remain unsettled. Still unresolved are the Commerce, Justice, Science bill, which includes funding for NSF, NOAA, NIST, and NASA; the Defense bill, which includes funding for DARPA and the Defense labs; and Labor-HHS, which includes funding for NIH. Because we’ve passed the end of the fiscal year (Sept. 30th), the government is operating under a “Continuing Resolution” that will keep agencies funded at the FY 09 rate through Dec 18th.

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FY 10 Appropriations Update: Energy, NSF, NIST, Defense

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