Good marketing is compelling and engaging, but since what pleases and intrigues one person may offend or irritate someone else, there is a distinct possibility that to optimize your conversion rates you will have to accept some level of attrition on your list. What do your metrics say about your campaign?
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It’s clear that our political, social and cultural approach towards old age today is already hopelessly out of date, so this event will provide Parliamentarians and stakeholders from across civil society with an opportunity to mark the first anniversary of the House of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.
5 Ways a Weekly Email Newsletter Can Increase Engagement and ROIEmail Delivered
If you have a weekly email newsletter, you can not only overcome email marketing problems, but you can pile on advantages too. There are 5 ways you can increase engagement and ROI with the help of a weekly email newsletter.
Everyone has emails that get sent to spam every once and a while, but if they are consistently ending up in the junk folder then there are some things you need to check out. If you don’t want to go through the trouble of trying to figure everything out on your own, you can always order a troubleshooting diagnostic test from EmailDelivered and we will figure out the problems for you.
Good marketing is compelling and engaging, but since what pleases and intrigues one person may offend or irritate someone else, there is a distinct possibility that to optimize your conversion rates you will have to accept some level of attrition on your list. What do your metrics say about your campaign?
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.
5 Ways a Weekly Email Newsletter Can Increase Engagement and ROIEmail Delivered
If you have a weekly email newsletter, you can not only overcome email marketing problems, but you can pile on advantages too. There are 5 ways you can increase engagement and ROI with the help of a weekly email newsletter.
Everyone has emails that get sent to spam every once and a while, but if they are consistently ending up in the junk folder then there are some things you need to check out. If you don’t want to go through the trouble of trying to figure everything out on your own, you can always order a troubleshooting diagnostic test from EmailDelivered and we will figure out the problems for you.
7. Alguns dels menjars tradicionals de
França
-La quiche. ( la massa de la quiche porta:
Ou, farina, llet, aigua i mantega.)
-La sopa de ceba.
- A França quasi tots els menjars estan fets de
mantega i crema de llet
8.
9. Alguns dels menjars tradicionals
d’Itàlia
-La pasta.
• Hi ha una gran quantitat de pastes amb noms,
formes i colors diferents.
10.
11. Alguns del menjars tradicionals
d’Anglaterra
-El fish and chips (Peix amb patates).
• Els anglesos tenen una gran varietat de
salsitxes.
12. Alguns dels menjars tradicionals del Japó
• A Japó en comptes de blat fan servir arròs
perquè en comptes de cultivar blat cultiven
arròs. I en comptes d’oli d’oliva el principal
ingredient per donar gust és la soja.
- El shushi.
- Yakisoba.
- Peix cru
14. • Us heu posat a pensar alguna vegada si el pa
amb tomàquet i la pizza s’assemblen?
• Doncs sí.
• El pa amb tomàquet és pa sucat amb tomàquet
i la pizza es una massa de pa amb tomàquet ( i
a sobre hi posem ingredients que tenim a casa)
• Les salsitxes de Londres s’assemblen a la nostra
botifarra amb mongetes seques.
15. Fonts d’informació
• Els meus pares.
• La viquipèdia (només per les fotos que hi ha)
• Coses que ja sabia.
• Google imatges.
• Google.
• Restaurants.
16. Valuation
• I choose this theme because i like gastronomy.
• I learned a lot about the food from other
contries.
• I enjoyed very much this work.