Your dilemma: IT compensation surveys that are out-of-date or don’t have the job title or city needed. Or the surveys you use most regularly often are based on surveyed job titles, but at your company job titles often don’t match up very well with what your people really do on-the-job, making it virtually impossible to get any usable data from them. So, why do dozens of IT compensation consulting survey companies purchase Foote Research survey data for their clients who require the freshest, most accurate data available?
Because the Quarterly IT Salary +Skills Pay Survey Report: E-Commerce solves all of these problems for you: it is corrected for job title/job content mismatches, updated quarterly, includes accurate job descriptions, and gives you a complete view of total pay for these jobs and skills in 20 Tier 1 U.S. cities or 44 Tier 2 U.S. cities from our survey of more than 95,000 IT professionals in nearly 2,000 employers in the U.S. and Canada:
Base salary
Cash bonus
Premium pay data for all IT skills and certifications critical to performing jobs directly related to E-Commerce.
Your dilemma: IT compensation surveys that are out-of-date or don’t have the job title or city needed. Or the surveys you use most regularly often are based on surveyed job titles, but at your company job titles often don’t match up very well with what your people really do on-the-job, making it virtually impossible to get any usable data from them. So, why do dozens of IT compensation consulting survey companies purchase Foote Research survey data for their clients who require the freshest, most accurate data available?
Because the Quarterly IT Salary +Skills Pay Survey Report: E-Commerce (Canada) solves all of these problems for you: it is corrected for job title/job content mismatches, updated quarterly, includes accurate job descriptions, and gives you a complete view of total pay for these jobs and skills in 18 canadian cities from our survey of more than 95,000 IT professionals in nearly 2,000 employers in the U.S. and Canada:
Base salary
Cash bonus
Premium pay data for all IT skills and certifications critical to performing jobs directly related to E-Commerce (Canada).
Long before the Internet, people shared product opinions with friends and family through word-of-mouth. Today, social media tools enable consumers to extend their connections and conduct commerce in powerful new ways. And even though surveys find that people join social networks mainly to communicate with friends, an increasing amount of that socializing relates to sharing product and brand opinions.
Online retail video brings products to life in a way that static images and text can't, often providing the final push a consumer needs to make a purchase. No wonder the number of online shoppers who watch retail videos grew 40% in a year.
The Video Usage in E-Commerce report analyzes the power of product videos to lower the number of abandoned shopping carts, reduce return rates and generate higher sales.
In 2007, Canadian retailers sold C$13.8 billion ($12.9 billion) of consumer products and travel bookings online. By 2012 Canadian business-to-consumer (B2C) e-commerce sales will reach C$22.8 billion ($22.2 billion). Not bad numbers in a tough economy.
The Canada B2C E-Commerc report analyzes the reasons why Canada's online economy is positioned to weather the economic storm.
2008 was not a good year for e-commerce. Due to the economic crisis, eMarketer lowered its US retail e-commerce sales (excluding travel) estimate to $137 billion, up merely 7% over last year. It's the first year of single-digit growth since the Department of Commerce (DoC) began tracking online sales in 1999.
The Retail E-Commerce Update report looks both forward and backward to track the trends affecting this important segment of the online economy.
The days of search, point and click-to-cart shopping are rapidly disappearing. Today's online customers expect - and demand - a much richer experience from retailers in every category.
The Customer Shopping Experience Online report analyzes the new trends, tactics and tools that are reshaping the way retailers do business, online and off.
Evidence of an economic slowdown is mounting in the UK. But so far e-commerce seems relatively immune to the downturn, due to competitive prices, easy product comparisons, fuel savings and other convenience factors that encourage consumers to shop online.
The UK B2C E-Commerce report analyzes how the challenging economic environment is affecting online versus offline sales revenues.
In 2008, US travel sales booked online will reach $105 billion, up 12% from 2007. But even though sales are growing, fewer travelers are booking their trips online.
The US Online Travel report analyzes why the dynamics of one of the Internet's most successful categories are changing.
Although consumers are reacting to the economic downturn by spending less, this will create more of a hardship for retail stores than for e-tailers. A drop in new online buyers - an inevitable sign of the maturation of the online retail channel - will contribute most to the decline of e-commerce sales growth.
The US Retail E-Commerce report charts and analyzes the factors that are contributing to the changing dynamics in online sales.