iPad, tablety, smartphony a média. Jak si rozumí?Adam Javurek
Jak se média vypořádala s fenoménem iPad? Co víme o čtenářích na tabletech a smartphonech, jak s aplikacemi experimentují noviny a na jaké problémy naráží?
Slajdy z konference IAC 2011.
Dvouhodinovka má dvě části: první část se věnuje samostatné práci v hodině - studenti zjišťují, jaký je rozdíl mezi generací X, Y a Z a v jejich používání médií, jaké jsou generační rozdíly mezi v přístupu k médiím apod. Druhá část je výkladová a věnuje se vývojem médiím od vynálezu fonografu. Není potřeba vykládat v hodině.
iPad, tablety, smartphony a média. Jak si rozumí?Adam Javurek
Jak se média vypořádala s fenoménem iPad? Co víme o čtenářích na tabletech a smartphonech, jak s aplikacemi experimentují noviny a na jaké problémy naráží?
Slajdy z konference IAC 2011.
Dvouhodinovka má dvě části: první část se věnuje samostatné práci v hodině - studenti zjišťují, jaký je rozdíl mezi generací X, Y a Z a v jejich používání médií, jaké jsou generační rozdíly mezi v přístupu k médiím apod. Druhá část je výkladová a věnuje se vývojem médiím od vynálezu fonografu. Není potřeba vykládat v hodině.
Consumers are willing to pay for services that they find either adds convenience or delivers value. In this podcast and presentation from the 2013 NAFCU Annual Conference, Dave Schneider, Brent Dixon, and Paul Muse discuss how to expand your credit unions credit and debit opportunities and explore innovative products that can help guide your future credit union operations, including new approaches to increasing penetration, activation, and usage of the fundamental card. Also, learn to leverage new payment options that will appeal to Gen Y consumers, including Internet PIN debit, PINless at the point of sale, and payments and delivery of service through mobile.
Are we ready to make the UK the best country to grow old in?
One year ago, the House of Lords Committee on Public Services and Demographic Change produced a hard-hitting report which argued that the Government and society was “woefully underprepared” for a rapidly ageing population.
On the first anniversary of the ‘Ready for Ageing?’ report, we are in the unenviable position that sees the United Kingdom ranked unlucky number 13 in a global index of the best countries in the world to grow old in. The principal recommendations in the ‘Ready for Ageing?’ report have not yet been properly addressed or acted on.
In his October 2013 speech on ‘The Forgotten Million’, Secretary of State for Health, Jeremy Hunt MP, set down a challenge that the UK should in fact aspire to be best country to grow old in, but the question remains: why are our public services so poorly prepared for major demographic change, and what as a society can we do to ensure future generations of older people thrive in later life?
Lord Filkin, Chair of the Committee on Public Services and Demographic Change, hosted a House of Lords breakfast debate looking forward to 2030, a date by which there will be 50% more people aged 65 and over in England and a doubling in the numbers of people aged 85 and over. As a society, we need to prepare for the next 15 years right now and certainly in the next Parliament.
At this event, Independent Age and ILC-UK, supported by members of the Ready for Ageing Alliance, launched 2030 Vision: Making the UK the best country to grow old in, which will look to the long term and consider what politicians and policy makers need to now, both in preparation for next year’s General Election, and between 2015 and 2020, to prepare for the long term opportunities and challenges ahead.
During the debate, we invited contributions on the economic and societal implications of population ageing and the major policy decisions all the main parties face to ready the UK and its public services for dramatic population ageing.
It’s clear that our political, social and cultural approach towards old age today is already hopelessly out of date, so this event will provide Parliamentarians and stakeholders from across civil society with an opportunity to mark the first anniversary of the House of Lords’ Committee report on demographic change and look ahead, so as a society we can seize the opportunities presented by an ageing population.
2012 Ford Mustang For Sale NE | Ford Dealer NebraskaSidDillon Crete
2012 Ford Mustang brochure provided by Sid Dillon in Crete, NE. Find the 2012 Ford Mustang for sale in Nebraska. Call us about our current sales and incentives at (866) 906-7153. http://www.siddilloncrete.com
Everyone's talking about big data – getting our arms around it and putting it to work for us. This paper summarizes a panel discussion at the 2012 SAS Financial Services Executive Summit where industry leaders shared their ideas about big data and what their organizations are doing with it. Aditya Bhasin from Bank of America talked about how to extract more value from the data you already have, even if it's just a fraction of what's out there. Robert Kirkpatrick, who leads the UN Global Pulse initiative, talked about how data can help us better understand global economies and human welfare. Charles Thomas, a market research and analytics executive at USAA, described how his company is navigating the shift to more real-time and predictive analysis. Request the full whitepaper at: http://www.sas.com/reg/wp/corp/50060?&utm_source=NAFCUServices&utm_medium=landingpage&utm_campaign=SASwhitepaper82912. More info at: www.nafcu.org/sas
Lead Generation Content For Advisors: 13 Tax Tips For Doctors For 2013Advisors4Advisors
You can purchase this special report targeted to doctors branded with your logo. Post it for all to see on your website, or require visitors submit their contact information to view the report in order to generate leads.
ILC-UK and the Actuarial Profession debate: Changing the perception of retire...ILC- UK
For the third year in a row. ILC-UK launched into the new year with events in both Scotland and England. These events, in partnership with the Actuarial Profession, and supported by Swiss Re, explored how the perception of retirement is changing and could change in the future.
The original concept of retirement is being eroded. Increasing concern over the costs of retirement has led to a shift of responsibility from Government and the corporate sector to the individual. The State Pension Age has been increased and public and private pensions are being scaled back.
Individuals are likely to have to work longer, contribute more and receive less than earlier generations. However, we need also to reflect that the older population is a very heterogeneous group, and the current balance of public and private funding will vary dramatically across the population.
At the same time we have seen dramatic improvements in life expectancy, and there is a huge opportunity (a longevity dividend) if further increases in life expectancy are spent in good health. This is certainly the case if we don’t just prolong survival for those with disease but delay the onset of disease and its progression. This requires flexibility in encouraging those that can work to work beyond current state pension ages and in focusing healthcare to those that will benefit. It also means changing people's behaviours towards work and retirement by highlighting the implications and restrictions of a long life beyond retirement, dependant on state funding.
At these events we highlighted particular initiatives that might help this period of transition - for example:
• developing agreed metrics of health status;
• cross-generational sharing of concerns so that each generation understands the challenges faced by others;
• moving towards patient-centred healthcare where geriatricians and GPs consider the holistic health of the individual;
• recognising the benefits and costs of preventative medicine and avoiding the trap of always assuming preventative medicine is preferable because it will cost less (it may not);
• provision of a suitable level of post-retirement income for all members of society and understanding what balance of public and private pension provision can help in this aim.
Following these events, the ILC-UK will launch a think piece which will explore the debate outlined above.
Agenda from the event
16:30 – 16:35
Welcome and introduction from chair Baroness Sally Greengross, Chief Executive, International Longevity Centre – UK
16:35 – 16:50
Sarah Vickerstaff, Professor of Work and Employment at the School of Social Policy, Sociology and Social Research, University of Kent
16:50 – 17:05
David Sinclair, ILC-UK
17:05 – 17:20
Stephen Balchin, DWP
17:20 – 17:35
Daniel Ryan, Swiss Re
17:35 – 18:30
Discussion and Q&A
David Sinclair on the challenges of vaccinating adultsILC- UK
Presented at the IFA Champions Summit in early November, Director of the International Longevity Centre - UK, David Sinclair, considers the challenges and solutions to vaccinating adults.
Customer Segmentation: How to ‘Profile’ Your Subscribers and Boost Email Camp...Email Delivered
Three problems that occur when you don’t use customer segmentation are the “one size does not fit all” syndrom, message to subscriber match (or lack there of), and confusing prospects with customers. In this article we’ll tell you how to avoid all three.
Consumers are willing to pay for services that they find either adds convenience or delivers value. In this podcast and presentation from the 2013 NAFCU Annual Conference, Dave Schneider, Brent Dixon, and Paul Muse discuss how to expand your credit unions credit and debit opportunities and explore innovative products that can help guide your future credit union operations, including new approaches to increasing penetration, activation, and usage of the fundamental card. Also, learn to leverage new payment options that will appeal to Gen Y consumers, including Internet PIN debit, PINless at the point of sale, and payments and delivery of service through mobile.
Are we ready to make the UK the best country to grow old in?
One year ago, the House of Lords Committee on Public Services and Demographic Change produced a hard-hitting report which argued that the Government and society was “woefully underprepared” for a rapidly ageing population.
On the first anniversary of the ‘Ready for Ageing?’ report, we are in the unenviable position that sees the United Kingdom ranked unlucky number 13 in a global index of the best countries in the world to grow old in. The principal recommendations in the ‘Ready for Ageing?’ report have not yet been properly addressed or acted on.
In his October 2013 speech on ‘The Forgotten Million’, Secretary of State for Health, Jeremy Hunt MP, set down a challenge that the UK should in fact aspire to be best country to grow old in, but the question remains: why are our public services so poorly prepared for major demographic change, and what as a society can we do to ensure future generations of older people thrive in later life?
Lord Filkin, Chair of the Committee on Public Services and Demographic Change, hosted a House of Lords breakfast debate looking forward to 2030, a date by which there will be 50% more people aged 65 and over in England and a doubling in the numbers of people aged 85 and over. As a society, we need to prepare for the next 15 years right now and certainly in the next Parliament.
At this event, Independent Age and ILC-UK, supported by members of the Ready for Ageing Alliance, launched 2030 Vision: Making the UK the best country to grow old in, which will look to the long term and consider what politicians and policy makers need to now, both in preparation for next year’s General Election, and between 2015 and 2020, to prepare for the long term opportunities and challenges ahead.
During the debate, we invited contributions on the economic and societal implications of population ageing and the major policy decisions all the main parties face to ready the UK and its public services for dramatic population ageing.
It’s clear that our political, social and cultural approach towards old age today is already hopelessly out of date, so this event will provide Parliamentarians and stakeholders from across civil society with an opportunity to mark the first anniversary of the House of Lords’ Committee report on demographic change and look ahead, so as a society we can seize the opportunities presented by an ageing population.
2012 Ford Mustang For Sale NE | Ford Dealer NebraskaSidDillon Crete
2012 Ford Mustang brochure provided by Sid Dillon in Crete, NE. Find the 2012 Ford Mustang for sale in Nebraska. Call us about our current sales and incentives at (866) 906-7153. http://www.siddilloncrete.com
Everyone's talking about big data – getting our arms around it and putting it to work for us. This paper summarizes a panel discussion at the 2012 SAS Financial Services Executive Summit where industry leaders shared their ideas about big data and what their organizations are doing with it. Aditya Bhasin from Bank of America talked about how to extract more value from the data you already have, even if it's just a fraction of what's out there. Robert Kirkpatrick, who leads the UN Global Pulse initiative, talked about how data can help us better understand global economies and human welfare. Charles Thomas, a market research and analytics executive at USAA, described how his company is navigating the shift to more real-time and predictive analysis. Request the full whitepaper at: http://www.sas.com/reg/wp/corp/50060?&utm_source=NAFCUServices&utm_medium=landingpage&utm_campaign=SASwhitepaper82912. More info at: www.nafcu.org/sas
Lead Generation Content For Advisors: 13 Tax Tips For Doctors For 2013Advisors4Advisors
You can purchase this special report targeted to doctors branded with your logo. Post it for all to see on your website, or require visitors submit their contact information to view the report in order to generate leads.
ILC-UK and the Actuarial Profession debate: Changing the perception of retire...ILC- UK
For the third year in a row. ILC-UK launched into the new year with events in both Scotland and England. These events, in partnership with the Actuarial Profession, and supported by Swiss Re, explored how the perception of retirement is changing and could change in the future.
The original concept of retirement is being eroded. Increasing concern over the costs of retirement has led to a shift of responsibility from Government and the corporate sector to the individual. The State Pension Age has been increased and public and private pensions are being scaled back.
Individuals are likely to have to work longer, contribute more and receive less than earlier generations. However, we need also to reflect that the older population is a very heterogeneous group, and the current balance of public and private funding will vary dramatically across the population.
At the same time we have seen dramatic improvements in life expectancy, and there is a huge opportunity (a longevity dividend) if further increases in life expectancy are spent in good health. This is certainly the case if we don’t just prolong survival for those with disease but delay the onset of disease and its progression. This requires flexibility in encouraging those that can work to work beyond current state pension ages and in focusing healthcare to those that will benefit. It also means changing people's behaviours towards work and retirement by highlighting the implications and restrictions of a long life beyond retirement, dependant on state funding.
At these events we highlighted particular initiatives that might help this period of transition - for example:
• developing agreed metrics of health status;
• cross-generational sharing of concerns so that each generation understands the challenges faced by others;
• moving towards patient-centred healthcare where geriatricians and GPs consider the holistic health of the individual;
• recognising the benefits and costs of preventative medicine and avoiding the trap of always assuming preventative medicine is preferable because it will cost less (it may not);
• provision of a suitable level of post-retirement income for all members of society and understanding what balance of public and private pension provision can help in this aim.
Following these events, the ILC-UK will launch a think piece which will explore the debate outlined above.
Agenda from the event
16:30 – 16:35
Welcome and introduction from chair Baroness Sally Greengross, Chief Executive, International Longevity Centre – UK
16:35 – 16:50
Sarah Vickerstaff, Professor of Work and Employment at the School of Social Policy, Sociology and Social Research, University of Kent
16:50 – 17:05
David Sinclair, ILC-UK
17:05 – 17:20
Stephen Balchin, DWP
17:20 – 17:35
Daniel Ryan, Swiss Re
17:35 – 18:30
Discussion and Q&A
David Sinclair on the challenges of vaccinating adultsILC- UK
Presented at the IFA Champions Summit in early November, Director of the International Longevity Centre - UK, David Sinclair, considers the challenges and solutions to vaccinating adults.
Customer Segmentation: How to ‘Profile’ Your Subscribers and Boost Email Camp...Email Delivered
Three problems that occur when you don’t use customer segmentation are the “one size does not fit all” syndrom, message to subscriber match (or lack there of), and confusing prospects with customers. In this article we’ll tell you how to avoid all three.
My presentation from Contagious Starter Conference about trends and fuckups.
Česká Social Media Data z Lifestyle studie 2018. 07/2018, repre internetová populace 16+ N=5144
Slovenská data o přesunu z FB na Instagram. 09/2018, repre internetová populace 16+ N=504
ROI - Volně šiřitelná studie Getting Media Right
Moje prezentace z Digital Rulezz 2018 - Getting Media Right
Jak v roce 2018 vypadá social a jaký je trend v přelivu uživatelů? Blíží se nějaký Game Changer? Důvěřují lidé vlastně reklamě, skrze kterou se jim snažíme dostat do životů? Kolik z nich si nás blokuje? A co my, marketéři? Jak podle nás vypadá svět Walled gardens? Věříme vůbec marketingovým mixům svých značek? A má vůbec cenu dělat integrované kampaně?
Moje keynote z Effie o efektivitě online reklamy a co je potřeba ukazovat, pokud chcete v Effie uspět. video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YOjaPI1QxTs
Moje prezentace z úžasné konference o Snapchat v ČR - Snapujem. Zkusil jsem do ní dopsat texty, které byly pouze řečeny, ale je jasný, že na živo je to vždy lepší!