It\'s Your Move

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A review of the past and present of market research, and a look into its future. The market research profession is undergoing disruptive innovation.

Transcript of It\'s Your Move

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A presentation created for the research profession and its

members by Paul Schumann.

April 15, 2008

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David Pearce Snyderwww.the-futurist.com

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Quantitative research began with the first known survey

done 24 years after the declaration of independence.

It was the U.S. Census.

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The first recorded straw polls were

used by newspapers to see how the

political winds were blowing.

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The first recorded straw polls were

used by newspapers to see how the

political winds were blowing.

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Florence Nightingale used sound data to measure the effectiveness of

medical practices and developed graphical methods to dramatically

display complex statistical information to a broad audience contributing to

healthcare reform.

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Mailed surveys were first used.

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Qualitative research was being done at Mahin’s Advertising

Agency.

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Walter Dill Scott undertook a program of experimental research on advertising for the Agate Club of Chicago.

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The first ever formal market research report issued on the agricultural implement industry was published.

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The Chicago Tribune published a market study, based on house-to-house interviews, of the city of Chicago.

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The ABCD typology, a societal class based system, was introduced as a way of segmenting markets. It became widely used even though the typology was unsubstantiated by research.

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The US Department of Commerce published the Census of Distribution.

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The Likert scale was introduced.

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It became common for mass circulating magazines and for radio companies to

maintain readers’ panels. And, the Cooperative Analysis of Broadcasting

(CAB) became the standard for nationwide ratings research.

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Woman’s Home Companion launched a panel that reached a population of

1500.

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Observational research began when CBS introduced the idea of pantry

checks of their panelists to see which brands had appeared and

disappeared.

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The American Institute of Public Opinion was founded.

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George Gallup added more rigor to survey methodology to advance

political polling.

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Literary Digest’s wealthy readers are polled and predict a landside

for Alf Landon. Gallup’s poll with a much smaller but more scientific

sample correctly calls it for Franklin Roosevelt.

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Coase publishes The Nature of the Firm that establishes the concept that the size of a firm can be reduced as the cost of communication or transactions comes down. This becomes one of the keys to the fragmentation of the industry.

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The focus group is developed.

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The Neilsen Ratings is launched.

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The first electronic computer.

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AAPOR (American Association of Public Opinion Research) is

born.

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Gallup got it wrong. He predicted that Thomas Dewey would win the

presidential election. Harry Truman actually won. He didn’t realize the voters were more volatile than he

thought and closed his polls two weeks before the election.

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The bar code was developed by two graduate students at

Drexel.

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The Nielsen Audimeter was described in an ad as “…the graphic recording

instrument installed in a radio receiver in a scientifically selected radio home.

By recording every twist of the dial, every minute of the day or night, the

Audimeter obtains precious radio data not available not available through any

other means.”

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The first commercially available computer is announced. The development of FORTRAN in 1954 accelerated the diffusion of the computer.

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The early adopter concept was introduced by Katz and Lazarsfeld starting consideration of opinion

leaders and influencers.

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Osgood publishes The Measurement of Meaning that

introduced the concept of semantic space. He showed that everyone evaluates their social

environment in three dimensions – evaluation, power and activity.

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Marketing Research Association (MRA) was founded.

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Kennedy becomes the first presidential candidate to use political polling in his campaign hiring Louis

Harris.

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Interest in consumer behavior grew and focus on the environment

faded. Motivational Research is pioneered by researchers who thought that the real source of consumer decisions lay in their

hidden depths of their unconscious.

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Motivational factors transformed into psychographic variables encompassing the fields of

attitudes, opinions and interests. These variables were often grouped together into what became know as

lifestyles.

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The term positioning is first used.

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ARPANET is developed. This later became the internet.

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Conjoint analysis is pioneered in marketing applications.

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The Universal Product Code (UPC) was accepted using bar code.

Mario Cardullo invented the first true ancestor of modern RFID; a passive radio

transponder with memory.

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Elizabeth II, Queen of the United Kingdom sends out an e-mail.

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Error bars introduced in graphical plots.

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Customer Relations Management begins and brands became

understood as symbolic extensions of products.

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IBM introduces the PC.

The Council of American Survey Research Organizations (CASRO) was formed.

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Free software movement started by Stallman.

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Stuart Brand coined the phrase information wants to be free. He said, “On the one hand information wants to be expensive, because it's so valuable. The right information in the right place just changes your life. On the other hand, information wants to be free, because the cost of getting it out is getting lower and lower all the time. So you have these two fighting against each other.”

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The Domain Name System (DNS) is introduced for the Internet.

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The first domain name is issued – symbolics.com.

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The concept of data mining is introduced.

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The first search engine, Archie, is developed. This is the first generally available data mining tool for the Internet.

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The World-Wide Web, developed by Tim Berners-Lee at CERN, is released. This becomes the infrastructure needed for the information age. Like the railroad was to steam power, the road system was to cars and the distribution grid was to electric power, the World-Wide Web, accelerated the productivity of information systems and software.

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Coase is awarded the Nobel Prize in Economics for his discovery and clarification of the significance of transaction costs and property rights for the institutional structure and functioning of the economy. Now with the information infrastructure in place, his 1937 idea can be implemented broadly leading to outsourcing, disintermediation or removal of middlemen, flattening of hierarchies and fragmentation.

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The Council for Marketing & Opinion Research (CMOR) was formed.

The first text message was sent via telephone.

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The first online panel was used.

The first blog was introduced. Everyone could now become content creators.

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The diversified and multifaceted media environment permitted easy mobility across channels and content space

producing an evasive or unmanageable consumer whose attention became a

scarce resource. To market researchers, consumers began to appear as

fragmented, nomadic individuals, moving around in a media saturated life

world constantly looking for ways to constitute themselves as subjects.

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RealAudio is introduced allowing the World-Wide Web to hear in near

real time.

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The first wiki was published. A wiki wiki was a fast bus in Hawaii. The term wiki was coined to name quick, collaborative web site development and publication systems.

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Wal-Mart pioneered massive data mining to transform its supplier relationships. Wal-Mart

captured point-of-sale transactions from over 2,900 stores in 6 countries and continuously transmitted this data to its massive 7.5 terabyte Teradata data

warehouse. Wal-Mart allowed more than 3,500 suppliers, to access data on their products and

perform data analyses. These suppliers used this data to identify customer buying patterns at the store display level. They used this information to manage local store inventory and identify new

merchandising opportunities. Wal-Mart computers processed over 1 million complex data queries.

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The Internet Archive, a free and open archive of images, video and software,

is created. It also includes the Way Back Machine, an archive of web sites.

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Modern instant messaging system is introduced.

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The Virtual Room Videoconferencing System (VRVS), a Caltech-CERN project, was introduced.

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The first RFID passports ("e-passports") were issued by

Malaysia.

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The Harris Poll Online predicts accurately 21 out of 22 elections

for Governor and Senator.

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The open source movement began. While this was originally designed for the development of an operating systems to compete with Microsoft, it rapidly spread to other software tools, and then later to open content creation.

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The Interactive Marketing Research Organization (IMRO) was founded.

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Google is released.

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Brands began to be understood as virtual communities constructed in media space. The value of a brand

became connected with the particular experience or emotion

that was transmitted in the environment surrounding the

product.

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Living in a commercialized and surveiled environment entailed

producing a double that enters into the circulation of the capitalist economy as raw material for

information commodities. This virtual double, or multiple doubles, existed in

the virtual world of cyber space.

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The key scarce resources of the information economy are immaterial use values like ideas, design, content

or innovations.

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The Army intelligence unit, Able Danger, identified Mohamed Atta and

three other conspirators one year before 9/11 using data mining.

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Voice Over Internet Protocol (VOIP) was introduced.

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Wikipedia was launched.

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Low cost online survey tools such as SurveyMonkey and Zoomerang come into existence reducing the

barriers to online surveying.

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The term social software came into use. The topic included the burgeoning

list of software that supports interaction and collaboration. The

impact of social software resulted in user content creation. Intelligence and insight began to move to group many of whom didn’t even know each other.

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The first polling via text messaging was conducted.

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Smart Mobs is published. This event accelerated the application of

collaborative tools.

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Second Life, a virtual world, was introduced.

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The first schizophrenic avatar becomes a inhabitant of Second Life.

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The Mexican Attorney General's office implanted 18 of its staff members with

a RFID chip to control access to a secure data room.

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The Wisdom of Crowds is published opening the way for acceptance of

group processes.

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YouTube goes online making free distribution of user created videos

possible.

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Instant messaging in business becomes most rapidly accepted

information application ever.

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There were 32 million blogs in existence and a new blog was

launched every second. Blogs become recognized as a rich well of

spontaneous, unsolicited and unbiased public opinion and perception. It is

learned that monitoring blogs can tap into timely, relevant insights about

what people really think and how they are truly using products and services.

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Hitachi developed an RFID chip measuring 0.15 x 0.15mm, and thinner than a sheet of paper. RFID chips used

by Wal-Mart and others cost 5 cents each.

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Predictive market techniques begin to be used to in place of surveys in a

few applications.

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Extreme Democracy was published. The event memorializes the uses of

social software in politics. Information is gathered from willing

participants.

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Intelligent agents were use to model markets and transactions with

statistical outcomes.

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There were 80 million blogs at the end of the year.

Also by the end of the year Wikipedia had almost 1.5 million English articles.

694 million people used the internet worldwide.

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Second Life had 3 million registered users with peak usage of over 20,000 people concurrently. Real business is conducted in this virtual world (~ $20

million per month).

GSD&M, an ad agency, opened Idea City in Second Life where they

prototyped ad campaigns.

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Skype adds web cams, document sharing features, recording and

scheduled programming making web conferences available to

anyone at no cost.

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The Social Research Foundation officially launched the First Opinions Panel in Second Life. First Opinions was a consumer research

panel formed in Second Life to provide Fortune 500 companies with resident insight and feedback on new products, services and policies. The panel was owned by SRF, but it

was being exclusively licensed to and managed by MarketTools, a joint venture of

P&G and General Mills.

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The proliferation of social software tools begun in 2001 continued. These included content

management tools, e-mail & mass mobilization tools, tools for polls & surveys, smart mobs & meetups, forums, weblogs & wikis, e-mailing

systems & lists, syndication & RSS tools, surveillance tools such as Google, Technorati,

Daypop, Feedster & Blogdex, social networking services & directories, and social network analysis tools. The speed of proliferation of these types of tools made it almost impossible to stay current.

As their impact signaled a step function change in performance, the collection of tools became

known as Web 2.0.

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Research clients expected more knowledge and less data faster.

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More than half of Internet users who are members of online communities feel as strongly about their virtual

communities as they do about their real world communities.

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Ning 2.0 is released. Social networks can now be created by anyone, and

they have all the features of networks like FaceBook and

MySpace.

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TalkShoe is launched making Internet narrow/broad cast radio

accessible to anyone with no barriers to entry.

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MRA launches the Research Technology Consortium – a

collaborative to increase innovation and it’s diffusion in the research

profession.

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1.15 billion people use the Internet.

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1790 1800 1810 1820 1830 1840 1850 1860 1870 1880 1890 1900 1910 1920 1930 1940 1950 1960 1970 1980 1990 2000

The number of events per decade impacting the research profession is

increasing.

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We’ve looked at 218 years of history. How can we

characterize the present?

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It’s all about innovation.

The present is complex.

The future is uncertain.

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Here’s a view of some of the events that may happen that will

form the context for research over the next nine years.

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Consumer electronic devices are all connectable to the Internet.

The combination of survey research, qualitative studies, ethnographics and behavioral monitoring are expected in research (market insight). In addition, research includes foresight about the

future.

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We reach the point where over 90% of people lack trust in established

institutions and authority figures and trust their peers as the best sources of

information for consumer products.

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90% of telephone calls are wireless.

95% of people are computer literate.

Most advertising is personalized to the viewer.

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Biometrics are used to identify people using the Internet.

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Augmented reality with smartifacts readable by personal devices exist in most major urban centers. Both

advertising and research are obtained in these augmented

realities.

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Research client demand segments into two areas. There is need for

consultative, research led decision involvement fueled by creative

business intelligence and a leveraging of available knowledge to bring

foresight and insight. And, there is a demand for standardized routine

tracking that is process oriented, global and updated continuously.

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Purchasers of research routinely expect the integration of information

and insight generated across multiple data sources.

50% of survey revenue is online.

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All routine research functions can be performed through software available

to anyone.

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Electronic response is based on conversational inference. It becomes

possible for even qualitative surveys to be done without a person.

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Almost all research operations that can be infomated are outsourced or

automated.

The industry becomes globalized.

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RFID tags replace most bar codes. It becomes possible to track both

people and goods, and how they interact.

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Paper money is replaced by smart cards providing additional tracking

capabilities.

Internet has ability to transmit 10 gigabytes per second. This is 2500

times the speed in 2007 (4 megabytes per second). A movie can be downloaded in 30 seconds.

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An AI (artificial intelligent) entity becomes indistinguishable from a

person over the Internet.

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Virtual reality scenes appear in homes.

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90% of survey revenue is online.

3D video conferencing is available.

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The role of research is deeply embedded in most institutions. It is now recognized as one of the key

elements to any successful endeavor, and plays a key role in decision

making. However, the complexities of markets and the technological

solutions to deal with those complexities, continue to expand.

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David Pearce Snyderwww.the-futurist.com

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This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works 3.0 United States License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/3.0/us/ or send a letter to Creative Commons, 171 Second Street, Suite 300, San Francisco, California, 94105, USA.

Attribution to Paul Schumann, Glocal Vantage, Inc., www.glocalvantage.com.