Search
-
Business And The Euro 1999
Q1 Do you think the economic condition of the country will improve, stay the same, or get worse over the next 12 months?
-
50 Per Cent Of Male Workers Suffer From PMT
Pre-Millennium Tension Widespread in British Businesses According to Latest Research
-
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).
-
Posh And Becks Top Chart In 'Cool For Kids' Poll
Motorola's i-generation youth survey reveals what's hot and what's not in teenage Britain
-
Girls Just Wanna Have Phones
Motorola's i-generation youth poll reveals what's hot and what's not in teenage Britain
-
Ipsos - New Study Pinpoints What Consumers Want From Corporations
Consumers Worldwide Expect Businesses to Achieve Social as Well as Economic Goals New Study Pinpoints What Consumers Want From Corporations
-
Scotland's People: Results From The 1999 Scottish Household Survey
A new report providing detailed results from the Scottish Household Survey is published today by the Scottish Executive. It is the first in an annual series of reports about people living in Scotland today.
-
Regular PC Users in Major European Markets Entering the New Millennium With Uncomfortable Working Environments
Over three quarters of regular PC users in France, Germany and Britain feel more should be done to improve the environment in which they use desktop PCs, according to an independent survey published by MORI. More alarming for employers, only a third of desktops are considered comfortable for long periods, despite the fact that the heaviest PC users are spending more of their time using PCs to surf the Internet and access digital information.
-
It's Official: The End of the UK's 'Lunch Hour'
The UK's traditional lunch hour is under threat and could soon disappear altogether, as recent research found that only one in four workers are still taking the statutory one-hour for lunch. The national survey by break experts Kit Kat in conjunction with test Research, a member of the MORI organisation, discovered the average length of the midday break is now just 39 minutes.