Stats & Storylines

Stats & Storylines

Research, Real Time, Real Life

Blog Archive: February, 2010

Monday, February 8, 2010

We all know someone who is losing their hair.  Yet a new national survey finds that when it comes to hair loss, old wives’ tales, urban myths and misunderstandings abound.  A new survey conducted by Wakefield Research for Rogaine sets Americans straight on common follicle-fallacies. 

Myth #1:  Stress.  Everyone knows that stress causes hair loss, right?  Not exactly.  Stress results in a host of health issues, but hair loss isn’t one of them.   Yet 77 percent of Americans – more than three quarters of adults – incorrectly believe that stress can cause your hair to fall out.  While stress might cause you to pull your hair out, it won’t cause it to fall out on its own.

Myth #2: It only comes from one side of your family.  Lots of Americans have looked at a relative’s shining pate as if it were a crystal ball and asked themselves, “is that what my future holds?”  A majority (62%) think that the baldness trait just comes from the mother’s or father’s side of the family, when in fact, it can come from either side of the family. Concerned individuals should shake both sides of the family tree to foresee their future.

Myth #3: There is no cure for hair loss.  Many people assume that losing your hair is like being short:  you can add an inch but you’ll never play basketball.  Yet when it comes to hair loss, the idea that there isn’t an effective treatment just isn’t true.  50 percent of Americans believe that there is no effective treatment for hair loss.  Yet there are several effective treatments for re-growing hair.     

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Wednesday, February 10, 2010

55% of “Road Worry-ers” Feel Insecure When Spouse Is Traveling for Business

According to a new survey conducted by Wakefield Research and commissioned by Logitech, business travel can be harder on one's spouse than on the traveler.    

The survey found that many stay-behind spouses are fearful for their personal safety.  More than half (55%) have felt anxious or insecure when their significant other was away on a business trip.

While plenty (68%) of stay-at-home-spouses know someone who has had their home broken into, it doesn’t take a major event to feel unnerved.    Among those who have felt insecure about their safety, 66% say they’ve felt anxious because of a noise heard outside of their home.  

And, with winter storms ravaging the east coast, nervousnesses may be on the rise as temperatures fall. 38% of stay at home spouses who’ve felt anxious blame a bad storm as the cause.  Another 36% cite the loss of electric power as a source of insecurity.

Even something as simple as a news story can be an anxiety-inducing event.  Among those who have felt insecure when their spouse was away, one-third (33%) said a frightening news story was the source of their stress.  

Respondents reported a variety of rituals for coping with the stress.  More than half use conventional tricks like leaving the TV on (56%) or turning on more lights than usual (53%). Others are a bit odder.  For example, 15% of spouses talk to themselves and nearly one in ten (9%) sleep with a stuffed animal.

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Thursday, February 11, 2010

A recent survey conducted by Wakefield Research for 1-800-Flowers provides a helpful hint for those flustered by Valentine's Day flowers.

It’s tempting to want to shake it up on V-Day and break out of the conventional gift options.  However, most ladies still prefer roses.  55% believe that roses are the right move this February the 14th.

Thanks to crack PR agency MWW Group, USA Today's Snapshot tells the tale.

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Monday, February 22, 2010

How Qualcomm Used Survey Data at CES

For survey stats to stand out, they have to be creative as well as credible. This is particularly true when competing for attention in competitive environments like editors’ in-boxes or on crowded tradeshow floors.

A good example of this is the video Wakefield recently scripted and produced for Qualcomm's program at CES. The video is a stunning compilation of awe-inspiring wireless statistics that turn dry data into dynamite.  

More importantly, Qualcomm leveraged the video across a variety of platforms. First, it was prominently featured at Qualcomm’s impressive CES pavilion to drive foot traffic and create buzz. Paul Jacobs, Qualcomm Chairman and CEO, also referenced the data from the video in his well-received CES keynote address. Finally, Qualcomm recently posted the video on its site and on YouTube to encourage viral distribution.

These are all great examples of how the marriage of credibility and creativity can enliven data.  The stats used in the video are pretty mind-blowing.  Examples include:

Americans are 2x as likely to use the mobile web as they are to use public transportation.

There are as many people using technologies innovated by Qualcomm as there are English speakers worldwide.

If all 3G mobile devices worldwide were lined up end to end, they would stretch 3 times as long as the U.S. interstate system.

The number of new 3G subscribers added every month is equal to the population of Australia.

Smartphone sales are growing so fast, that if smartphone users lived in a single city, it would be the fastest growing metropolis in the U.S.

The number of mobile devices currently in service could be used to build a wall as long and tall as the Great Wall of China.

The annual wireless data service revenue from the top 3 U.S. mobile operators is enough to launch the space shuttle 11 times a month…for an entire year.

It’s this unique approach and combination of capabilities that makes Wakefield Research the preferred partner for some of the world’s leading brands and public relations agencies.

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