CONNECT WITH US
Categories
Tags
audience targeting site satisfaction campaign profiler audience data social media marketing audience segments first party data advertising targeting audience measurement event survey mobile sat social media publishers online advertising advertising demographics ad targeting audience profiler online survey facebook audience profiling display advertising audience segmentation audience demographics twitter crowd science market researchSites We Like
Archives
Twitter, iPhone & Android Surveys: Best Practices Review
Recent surveys by the Crowd Scientists regarding attitudes, adoption and usage for Social Media (Twitter, Facebook, MySpace) and Smartphones (iPhone, Android, Blackberry) can serve as a Best Practices test laboratory for advances in the level of audience intelligence that can be obtained.
Listen in as Sandra Marshall, VP Research and Crowd Scientist, gives a walk through on the state-of-the-science in online surveys. Sandra will be using the Twitter/Facebook Social Media survey as a blueprint on how to define, execute and interpret valid online opinions. The topics are interesting; the results are scientific; and the need for better audience measurement is growing rapidly.
Where: Downloadable WebEx recording
Who: Paul Neto, Cofounder and VP of Research
Why: Because you will need better surveys to sell advertising, improve ad campaigns and obtain deep visitor demographics and attitudinal data.
Download this FREE webinar on audience demographics today!
We recommend
- Social Media Study: Twitter While Driving
Greater Access via Mobile Devices by Twitter Users May Explain More Use of Social Media in Movie Theaters, Restaurants and Restrooms September 22, 2009 –...
- iPhone Overwhelms Blackberry and Others in Smartphone Loyalty: Crowd Science Survey
The latest primary research from Crowd Science… June 23, 2009 – Silicon Valley, California. Four out of ten Blackberry and other smartphone users would switch...
- Crowd Science Twitter Study Continues to Generate Media Interest
eMarketer.com used Crowd Science's Twitter research study in their recent article Going Social Anywhere and Everywhere. See our original discussion of the results here Or,...