This white paper is the fifth in a series of thought leadership pursuits by Euro RSCG Worldwide PR.
In October 2009, Euro RSCG Worldwide commissioned a survey to map the trajectory of social life and social media
usage in the United States, quizzing 1,228 Americans. A white paper looked at the macro developments in social
media and drew conclusions and implications for marketers and their clients. Our company conducted an additional
survey of 600 Americans about social media and health care. We presented our findings at an FDA hearing on
promoting FDA-regulated medical products online and through social media. To get a copy of the white paper, please
go to our Social Life and Social Media website
.
Shortly thereafter, seeking to better understand how teen girls spend, socialize and communicate, Euro RSCG Worldwide PR commissioned a survey of 100 teenage girls nationwide aged 13 to 18. A March 2010 white paper presented the proprietary study’s findings in the context of today’s communications and business worlds as they are increasingly dominated by social and other digital media. We used the information we gathered to launch The Sisterhood, an agency within an agency that is an insight group to help define the teenage female consumer’s ideas in fashion and beyond. To get a copy of the white paper, please go to The Sisterhood website
.
Euro RSCG Worldwide PR and Euro RSCG Life, the health-focused communications network of Euro RSCG Worldwide, commissioned the online “mood monitor” survey of 386 Americans in February 2010 that also led to a white paper. The survey showed that people’s interest in a raft of weighty matters had grown in the previous 12 to 18 months. And on many points, particularly related to money, Americans tended to net out far more pessimistic than optimistic on subjects such as quality of life, employment, real estate and schools. Euro RSCG commissioned a similar poll in the bellwether state of Connecticut. For a copy of the reports, please go to the Wh
ite Paperspage of the Euro
RSCG PR website.
In summer 2010, ERWW PR took part in a five-country study by Euro RSCG Social that looked at how millennials
(people aged 18 to 25) are making themselves felt in the workplace, consumer markets and politics. The biggest
bottom line in the survey: Young people across the world think the world needs changing, and they’re confident social
media will give them the power to accomplish that change. To download the report based on the study, please go to
our Social Life and Social Media website
.A new reportbuilt on the same study, discussing differences between
genders in that age group, launched this fall.
And for this paper, we drew on the results of some of these proprietary studies and others, plus independent research
and insights we gain through our global trendspotting network, connecting the dots between all of them.
Through such research and analysis, we are addressing topics that are not only imperative to our clients and our own
growth but are also driving news about the future. The studies are places to listen and learn. They’re propelling
momentum for companies, brands and causes. They’re satisfying the new value exchange, where consumers want
brands that listen,converse and enable them.
Please join us in the conversation.
Marian Salzman
President
Euro RSCG Worldwide PR, North America
200 Madison Avenue, 2nd floor
New York, NY 10016
http://www
.eurorscgpr.com
P:212-367-6811
E:
[email protected]
T:@mariansalzman