Search
-
Ipsos Polls Archive - 25 Million Adults Have Little Or No Savings And Are More Likely To Play The Lottery Than Save
25 Million Adults Have Little Or No Savings And Are More Likely To Play The Lottery Than Save
-
Lack Of Access May Be Hampering Growth In People Using Internet For Their Personal Finances
As a wave of financial services providers launch onto the Net a new MORI poll commissioned by Interactive Investor and Screentrade, shows that since April an extra 15,000 people a week approximately have been using the Net to arrange their finances. In total, approximately 1.8 million people say they have used the Internet for banking or buying financial products.
-
How The World Sees Britain
The survey conducted by MORI on behalf of the British Council among the successor generation in thirteen countries reveals what foreigners think about all aspects of British society and culture.
-
"Captains Of Industry" Are Conquering Technophobia According To BT Cellnet
The craze for sending text messages from mobile phones which has hit the nation has been secretly embraced by some of our top business people. Twenty nine per cent of the "Captains' of Industry" surveyed by MORI on BT Cellnet's behalf say they send and receive text messages from their mobile phone and a further nineteen per cent said they would find the service useful. Three per cent even admit to using the service to receive latest football scores and lottery results. The number of SMS messages sent in the UK each month has now topped 100 million (source: Mobile Data Association).
-
Winning The National Lottery Is Good For You!
Camelot Group Plc, operator of The UK National Lottery, today Monday 15th November 1999, released the first ever major survey of National Lottery winners to discover what effect the lottery really has on happiness, lifestyles and relationships.
-
Business And The Euro 1999 - Methodology
A total of 1,001 interviews have been conducted among chief executives, managing directors, chairmen, and other designated main board members of businesses in the UK between 29 September and 20 October 1999. All interviews were conducted by specialist telephone interviewers at MORI On-Line Telephone Surveys.
-
Touchy Feely Gives In-Store The Edge
New study demonstrates that for many consumers in-store shopping will continue to score over the Internet in the new millennium
-
Big Name Travel Brands Behind Increased Confidence In Timeshare
The recent entry into timeshare holidays of two more big-name travel brands - Thomas Cook and Airtours - is helping to boost consumer confidence, according to the "VO 2000 United Kingdom" survey sponsored by Interval International, resort exchange specialists. The research into timeshare trends was carried out in the UK by MORI.
-
Socio-Cultural Currents Affecting Heritage Site Visit Considerations or 'I didn't join English Heritage to be a Salesman'
My day job is the study of the British, the public generally, the electorate, in political terms (although opinion polls that you see in the newspapers and on television is but 1% of our turnover - that's right, 1%, of MORI's turnover - but 99% of the publicity).
-
British V-reg Car Buyers Pay £1.2billion Too Much
In the week that official figures for the September sales of 'V' registration cars are revealed, Direct Line claims that British drivers could have saved £1.2 billion had they bought their new cars on the continent. At the same time, Direct Line has revealed figures from its new Direct Line Motoring Report showing that over half of British drivers would consider buying their new car on mainland Europe.