All Results
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
1 - 10 of 91 Results
-
/ Marketing
Retailers need to temper consumers’ expectations
Disappointment over a lack of large discounts led shoppers’ satisfaction to dip over the holidays.
Posted 01/18/2012Zak StamborPost a comment
-
/ Technology
Shoppers are pretty satisfied with large e-retailers’ mobile sites and apps
ForeSee releases its first study of consumer satisfaction with mobile retail sites and apps.
Posted 01/12/2012Bill SiwickiPost a comment
Related Searches:Benchmark
-
/ Technology
Holiday shoppers show love for Amazon
But Netflix drops in an annual customer satisfaction study from ForeSee.
Posted 12/28/2011Thad RueterPost a comment
Related Searches:Cabela's | Cabelas | Sportsman Guid
-
/ Technology
Customer satisfaction with mobile sites and apps lags behind traditional sites
But more companies are beginning to take mobile seriously, ForeSee says.
Posted 10/21/2011Bill SiwickiPost a comment
Related Searches:Benchmark Brands
-
/ Technology
Satisfaction survey firm ForeSee Results rebrands
The research firm debuts a shorter name, ForeSee, and a new logo.
Posted 08/19/2011Allison Enright1 comments
Related Searches:Eddie Bauer
-
/ Marketing
Consumers flock to Facebook, but aren’t satisfied with it, a report says
And that dissatisfaction leaves the door open for Google to move in with Google+.
Posted 07/20/2011Allison EnrightPost a comment
-
/ Technology
Groupon holds a strong lead over LivingSocial in daily deal popularity
ForeSee says that shows the strong appeal of Groupon as some question its market value.
Posted 06/23/2011Stefany Moore2 comments
Related Searches:Woot
-
/ E-Retailers
Chefs Catalog cooks up a better e-commerce site with richer product images
Foodies and other shoppers can zoom into images and link to recipes.
Posted 05/26/2011Thad RueterPost a comment
Related Searches:Sur La Table | Chefs Catalog
-
/ Technology
Amazon replaces Netflix at the top of a customer satisfaction survey
Netflix, No. 1 for six years, drops two points to second place in Foresee study.
Posted 05/10/2011Stefany Moore3 comments
Related Searches:Peapod
-
/ Marketing
Direct traffic from social media sites is low, but its influence counts, a survey says
Less than 1% of web site traffic comes directly from social media.
Posted 04/08/2011Allison Enright1 comments
Advertisement
Advertisement




