Similar Articles |
|
The Motley Fool July 16, 2004 Brian Gorman |
Uncle Sam's Stingy With IT Datamonitor predicts that federal IT spending will slow, but it may not be that big of a deal. |
Information Today May 21, 2007 |
Informa to Acquire Datamonitor Datamonitor is a global provider of market intelligence through online data, analysis, and forecasting platforms and is consistent with Informa's strategy of providing high-value, specialist content to identified communities of business. |
Information Today October 9, 2000 Barbara Quint |
Datamonitor Syndicates Content to Web Sites with New CommentWire Service Datamonitor, a leading European market-analysis firm, has introduced a new Internet content product called CommentWire, designed for the fast-growing Web content syndication arena... |
CRM January 1, 2008 Joshua Weinberger |
CRM Market Set to Double Recent studies predict the global CRM market will double within six years, and suggest explosive growth in CRM adoption across every segment - especially on-demand CRM. |
Managed Care January 2008 |
Headlines on Deadline ... Private insurers paid $272 billion in hospital charges in 2005... More than half of health care payers surveyed planned no additional investment in transparency initiatives in 2008... |
Pharmaceutical Executive November 1, 2012 Capone & Pelletier |
Market Access Roadmap Historically, many companies have had ill-defined processes for planning market research activities across their product portfolio. Unified payer research planning is of top import. |
Wall Street & Technology May 29, 2008 Cory Levine |
Risk Management IT Spending Will Rise With Increased Commodities Markets Volatility The growth of global commodities trading volumes will require new compliance systems that address the entire trading chain. |
Bank Technology News September 2001 David Rountree |
IT Spending Today: Slowing but Growing Strategic consulting and research firm Datamonitor PLC believes most of the world's major financial services institutions will resist the urge to actually cut technology spending next year, although a slowdown in the rate of spending growth already is evident... |