Posted on November 30th, 2008 by admin
Britains Lead Figures
Britains AntiSubmarine Capability, 19191939 $315.45 Britains AntiSubmarine Capability, 19191939 is the first unified study of the development of Britains antisubmarine capability between the armistice in 1919 and the onset of the second world German submarine attack on Britains maritime trade in 1939. Well researched and yet accessibly written, this book challenges the widespread belief that the Royal Navy failed to anticipate the threat of the Uboat in the Second World War. Author: Franklin, George D. Series Title: Cass Series: Naval Policy and History Series Number: 17 Binding Type: Hardcover Number of Pages: 208 Publication Date: 2003/04/29 Language: English Dimensions: 9.46 x 6.36 x 0.90 inches
Britains Educational Reform $310.66 This book questions many of Britains idiosyncratic attitudes towards education. Dimensions missing from Britains recent reforms, but present in Japan are highlighted. The author argues that Britain could learn a lot from Japan in order to improve education and vocational training considerably. Author: Howarth, Mike Series Title: Education in Society Series Binding Type: Hardcover Number of Pages: 224 Publication Date: 1990/11/01 Language: English Dimensions: 5.51 x 8.50 x 0.62 inches
Figures $34.99 Ren Yi Figures - Giclee Print
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Immigration Benefits Britain? 60% of all New UK HIV Cases Result from Sub-Saharan Population Growth
Aarkstore Enterprise - Britain Shops: Overall -Aarkstore Enterprise Market Research How Britain Shops: Overall 2010
Table of Contents :
Introduction 1 Summary 1 EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 2 Consumers are shopping less, but younger shoppers have shown resilience 2 Consumers are shopping less frequently, especially in home-related sectors 2 Men are shopping much less than women as the downturn bites 2 35-44 year olds have become less active shoppers, while younger shoppers have shown more resilience 2 Competition for main user share is intensifying 2 The main user share of the top five retailers has increased in all sectors except personal care 2 Market leaders in all sectors except clothing, footwear and homewares have lost main user share 3 The 'Big Four' supermarkets have cemented their presence in non-food 3 Consumers have become more frugal and price-aware, and continue to shop around more 3 Consumers continue to shop around more 3 Shopping around is highest in the clothing sector 3 Shopping around remains high in big-ticket sectors 3 Converting visitors into main users is getting harder 4 Only music & video, DIY and food & grocery have seen increases in their conversion rate 4 Music & video has the highest conversion rate 4 Clothing continues to have the lowest conversion rate 4 Shopper loyalty has reached a new high 4 Shoppers are becoming more loyal 4 John Lewis takes the top spot in terms of loyalty, but pureplays have made big gains 5 Personal care shoppers are the most loyal, but are only marginally ahead of music & video shoppers 5 A superior shopping experience is now a pivotal loyalty driver 5 Price has increased in importance as a driver of loyalty... 5 .....but loyalty has primarily driven by the overall shopping experience 5 Time poor consumers and internet shoppers boost convenience as a loyalty driver 6 Retailer highlights 6 Marks & Spencer continues to succeed, despite the recession 6 B&Q's market dominance remains solid in DIY 6 In electricals, Currys is under pressure from grocers 6 Morrisons is this year's big winner in food & grocery 6 Clarks has extended its lead in footwear 7 Asda/George and Tesco have extended their lead over Argos 7 In music & video, HMV is an increasing threat to its competitors 7 Tesco has seen the greatest gains in main user and visitor shares in the personal care sector 7 Table of Contents 8 Table of figures 8 TABLE OF TABLES 9 Sector Snapshots 10 Clothing 10 The proportion of consumers regularly shopping for clothing has fallen 10 Consumers in the 25-44 age bracket have been feeling the pinch 10 Male shoppers have been deterred by the recession more than females 10 As price becomes more important, mid-market retailers have fought back 10 Conversion rates have continued to slide as shopping around increases 10 Loyalty has risen across all demographics to reach record levels 11 Quality, convenience and service have become increasingly important loyalty drivers 11 DIY 14 The recession has hit DIY activity 14 Wickes has achieved the biggest visitor and main user gains 14 Conversion has recovered from the dip recorded in 2009 14 A surge in loyalty reflects investment 14 Convenience has become much more important 14 Price moves up the agenda 15 Quality, service and facilities have been recognised 15 Electricals 18 Proportion of consumers regularly shopping for electricals falls 18 In particular under 45s shop less 18 Older AB shoppers prop up spending 18 Specialists lose out to non-specialists 18 Conversion rates fall as customers shop around more 18 Greater transparency boosts loyalty to record level 19 Price becomes more important 19 Service and quality also become more important 19 Growth of online raises expectations on range and convenience 19 Food & grocery 22 Fall in empty nesters leads to decline in proportion of shoppers regularly buying food & grocery 22 Big Four win back main user share - except Tesco 22 Price still biggest loyalty driver, but quality increases in importance 22 Loyalty hits new height 22 Footwear 25 Men have cut back on footwear purchases the most 25 Young and family-age consumers have also stopped buying 25 Shoe Zone has broken into the top three for main users 25 Conversion rates have slumped 25 Loyalty is on the rise 25 Quality has risen as a loyalty driver 26 Homewares 29 There has been a reduction in the number of younger homewares shoppers 29 The bias toward AB and female shoppers persists 29 Asda/George and Tesco have extended their lead over Argos 29 Conversion rates have declined for a second year 29 Customer loyalty has jumped again 29 Quality and range, rather than price, have increased in importance 30 Music & video 33 The number of music & video shoppers is down after a big boost in 2009 33 In particular, lower income customers are shopping less 33 Dedicated online operators' customers shop around the most 33 Online players have increased market consolidation 33 Loyalty is up and shopping around is down 33 Music & video boasts the second highest loyalty rate of all sectors 33 Convenience is becoming increasingly important 33 Price has become more important due to the impact of online retailers 34 Personal care 37 Proportion of consumers regularly shopping for personal care declines 37 Younger demographics take hit 37 More fickle discretionary-driven spend of ABC1s dries up 37 Specialists lose out to grocers 37 Flight to value impacts conversion rates 38 Loyalty rises 38 Importance of price as a loyalty driver increases 38 Range remains most important driver 38 Convenience remains a strong driver of loyalty 38 Shopping Patterns 41 Consumers are shopping less, but younger shoppers have shown resilience 41 Male 42 Female 44 16-24 46 25-34 48 35-44 50 45-54 52 55-64 54 65-plus 56 AB 58 C1 60 C2 62 DE 64 Retailer Concentration 66 Competition for main user share is intensifying 66 Clothing 68 DIY 70 Electricals 72 Food & grocery 74 Footwear 76 Homewares 78 Music & video 80 Personal care 82 Shopping Around 84 Consumers have become more frugal and price-aware, and continue to shop around more 84 Clothing 84 DIY 88 Electricals 92 Food & grocery 96 Footwear 100 Homewares 104 Music & video 108 Personal care 112 Conversion 116 Converting visitors into main users is getting harder 116 Clothing 117 DIY 120 Electricals 123 Food & grocery 126 Footwear 129 Homewares 132 Music & video 135 Personal care 138 Loyalty Summary 141 Shopper loyalty has reached a new high 141 Clothing 143 DIY 146 Electricals 148 Food & grocery 150 Footwear 152 Homewares 155 Music & video 157 Personal care 159 Loyalty Drivers 161 A superior shopping experience is now a pivotal loyalty driver 161 Clothing 162 DIY 165 Electricals 168 Food & grocery 171 Footwear 174 Homewares 177 Music & video 180 Personal care 183 Appendix 186 Overview 186 What is cDNA? 186 What's available? 186 More information? 186 Basic methodology 187 Detailed methodology 189 The selection of parliamentary constituencies 189 Metropolitan County 189 Other 100% urban 189 Mixed urban/rural 189 Rural 189 The selection of enumeration districts 190 The selection of respondents 190 Post-survey weighting 190 ACORN 191 Disclaimer 191 List of Tables Table 1: Summary of clothing shoppers, 2006-2010 12 Table 2: Summary of DIY shoppers, 2006-2010 16 Table 3: Summary of electricals shoppers, 2006-2010 20 Table 4: Summary of food & grocery shoppers, 2006-2010 23 Table 5: Summary of footwear shoppers, 2006-2010 27 Table 6: Summary of homeware
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Filed under: Britains Toys