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Sophie Alexander Market Research using Pay As You Go Online Sources - Publishers, Content and Coverage
11th September 2014

If you're looking for company, industry or country information on a Pay As You Go basis, the wealth of online market research sources can seem quite overwhelming. In her article, Sophie Alexander highlights the product offerings of four well-known market research vendors: Industry Report Store, MarketResearch.com, ReportLinker and Research and Markets. She includes the type of content, publishers, search features, account options as well as geographical and language coverage.

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Anne Jordan Source Update for Nexis
9th September 2014

The latest additions and takedowns in Nexis, researched and compiled by Anne Jordan.

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James Mullan Dealing with Information Silos
9th September 2014

As information professionals we're told that information silos within organisations should be discouraged as they often mean that information can't be shared easily. Whilst there are many tools available which can help break down information silos and increase knowledge sharing, James Mullan asks whether some of the new style social media tools that organisations have been implementing are actually adding to the problems associated with silos.

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Anne Jordan Source Update for ProQuest
8th September 2014

This month's additions in ProQuest, researched and compiled by Anne Jordan.

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Tim Buckley Owen Big Data Analytics - Useful, Yes, But Still Prone to Hype
8th September 2014

Big data analytics is now starting to prove its worth in many fields, including scientific research and criminal investigation as well as business and finance. But as it becomes more commoditised, and presented as neatly packaged solutions involving big names such as IBM, Thomson Reuters and LexisNexis, Tim Buckley Owen argues that information professionals must have the courage to pass on warnings when experts believe it’s becoming over-hyped. One recent warning suggests that the sheer number and complexity of predictive analytics tools used by financial institutions can make it difficult to monitor their performance or ensure they comply with regulations, and another counsels against uncritically accepting the concept of the data lake.

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Tim Buckley Owen LinkedIn - Game Changer, But It's Not Alone
5th September 2014

LinkedIn may hitherto have facilitated the recruitment process rather than managing it. But it’s already proving a serious disruptor to the recruitment sector and there’s evidence to suggest that its ambitions go far further. However it is not alone; existing online recruitment services can be expected to fight back, and LinkedIn has some not so well known but possibly serious rivals.

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Anne Jordan Source Update for Factiva
5th September 2014

The latest additions and takedowns in Factiva, researched and compiled by Anne Jordan.

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James Mullan Managing Your Intranet Search
3rd September 2014

James Mullan discusses what intranet managers should be doing to improve the search within their intranet, looking at options from tailored search to one size fits all.

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Chris Porter Product Review of LexisNexis Company Dossier (Value - Competitors, Development & Pricing)
2nd September 2014

In the final part of his review of LexisNexis Company Dossier, author Chris Porter considers what kinds of research needs it best meets and how its data and functionality stack up against some of its major competitors in the company information field. The service contains information on around 80 million companies and around 75 million business executives.

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Tim Buckley Owen Not Enough or Too Much? A Data Protection Dilemma
1st September 2014

Companies know that compromising privacy is bad for business, which is why Microsoft is challenging official disclosure demands in the United States courts. Meanwhile a United States congressional thinktank has concerns about the protection of personal financial records, and a British survey shows just how much customers will punish companies that play fast and loose with their data. But has the pendulum now swung too far in the privacy direction? One survey suggests that the protectionist barriers against digital trade could cause a measurable contraction in gross domestic product - but governments know that privacy wins votes.

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