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Task 6. Compose a summary of the text in 80 words



INQUIRING MINDS WANT TO KNOW – NOW!

Penton Media, a publisher of such business magazines as “Industry Week, Machine Design” and “Restaurant Hospitality”, was experiencing a decline in use of publication reader service cards. This postcard-sized device features a series of numbers, with one number assigned to each ad appearing in the publication. Readers circle the advertiser’s number to request product or service information by mail. Cards are used to track reader inquiries stimulated by advertising within the magazine. “By 1998 there was a growing belief in many quarters that business publication advertising was generating fewer leads than in the past,” shares Ken Long, director of Penton Research Services. “Knowing whether or not this is true is complicated by the fact that many companies don’t track the source of their leads”. This belief, however, could ultimately lead to advertising revenues if alternate methods of inquiry stimulation went untracked.

Penton started its research by comparing inquiry response options offered within September issues of 12 Penton magazines, including “Industry Week”. Adds were drawn from two years: 1992 (648 ads) and 1997 (690 ads). The average number of response options per ad was 3.3 in 1992, growing to 4.1 in 1997. More than half of 1997 ads offered call-free telephone numbers. “Two inquiry methods that are commonplace today, sending e-mail and visiting an advertiser’s Internet website, were virtually nonexistent in 1992,” noted Long. Not a single 1992 ad invited readers to visit a website and just one ad listed an e-mail address. Website addresses were found in three or five (60.9 per cent) 1997 ads, with e-mail addresses provided in 17.7 per cent of ads. Today, many websites contain a “contact us” feature that generates an e-mail message of inquiry. In 1997, advertisers were including their postal mailing address only 55.5 per cent of time, compared with 69 per cent in 1992 ads.

Penton protested a reader-targeted mail questionnaire by phone with a small ample drawn from its database of 1.7 million domestic subscribers. A second protest, by mail, involved 300 subscribers. Penton mailed the finalised study to 4,000 managers, executives, engineers and purchasing agents selected from the U.S. Penton database. The survey sample was constructed using stratified dispro­portionate random sampling with subscribers considered as belonging to one of 42 cells (seven industry groups by six job titles). A total of 710 completed questionnaires were received, with 676 of the respondents indicating that they purchase decision makers for their organisations. Penton analyzed only the answers of these 676 buyers. Data were analyzed by weighting responses in each cell by their percentage makeup in the overall population. The overall margin of error for the survey was +/- 4 per cent at the 95 per cent level of confidence. In-depth follow-up telephone interviews were conducted with 40 respondents, to gain deeper understanding of their behaviour and attitudes.

Almost every respondent (97.7 per cent) had contacted at least one advertiser during the past year. Newer methods of making inquiries – Web visits, fax-on-demand or e-mail – were used by half (49.1 per cent) of the buyers surveyed. But a look ahead shows the true impact of information technology. Within the next five years, 73.7 per cent expect to respond to more ads by sending e-mail to the company. In addition, 72.2 per cent anticipate visiting an advertiser’s website, and 60 per cent expect to increase their use of fax-on-demand. Three out of five purchasing decision makers have accessed to the Internet and 74.3 per cent of those without Internet service expect to have it within the next five years. Seven of 10 (72.4 per cent) respondents plan to use the Internet to research potential suppliers, products or service during the next five years, compared to 33.1 per cent using it for that purpose during the past year.

Findings revealed that the need for fast response and the need for information on product availability and delivery are influenced by the following:

1. Time pressures created by downsizing of the work force and demands for greater productivity.

2. The fast pace of doing business.

3. Cost considerations.

Behaviour varied depending on immediacy of purpose. When buyers have an immediate need for a product or service, telephone contact is the inquiry method of choice. Of the respondents, 79.5 per cent reported that they had called a tall-free number in the past year for an immediate need, while 66.1 per cent had called a local number and 64.7 per cent had called a long-distance number. When the need for a product or service is not immediate, buyers are more likely to use the e-mail. Among respondents, 71.4 per cent reported that they had mailed a reader service card in the past year for a no immediate need and 69.3 per cent had mailed a business-reply card to an advertiser.

“A paradigm is emerging for industrial purchasing,” concludes Long. “Buyers are working in real time. They want information more quickly and they want more information.”

Task 7. Read the text “Violence on TV” and translate it.

Task 8. Find answers to the following questions in the text and write them down:

1. What is Tidusville’s perception of the level of violence on KTDS?

2. Does one’s perception of violence on TV vary with gender, age, marital status, income or education?

3. Do parents with children at home have a different tolerance for violence than those without children at home?

4. Do viewers who spend a lot of time watching TV become desensitised to violence?





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