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Following are several of our recent press releases:
The Survey of Academic and Special Libraries
July 27th, 2000: The information buying balance of power has subtly shifted in favor of libraries, especially those
that tend to be aware of alternative web access to databases often carried by commercial online services, according to
a new study just published by Primary Research Group. The study-The Survey of Academic and Special Libraries,
2001 edition (isbn#:1-57440-042-8)-is based on a random sample of 125 academic, legal, medical, corporate
and government libraries. The survey data is broken out by library type (corporate, legal, medical/health,
academic, and government/non-profit), by school type (public, private, or non-academic), and by size of the
library, based on the library's level of expenditures. Read More
The Survey of Law Firm Information Technology Usage and Acquisition Strategies [November 22, 1999]
New York, November 22, 1999: American law firms spend an estimated 7.9 percent of their annual billings
on technology, including the costs of training, hardware, software and staff support, according to a new
study just published by Primary Research Group, Inc. The two-volume study – The Survey of Law Firm
Information Technology Usage and Acquisitions Strategies (ISBN# 1-57440-041-X) – is based on a survey
of 75 randomly selected American law firms, with a mean of 39.04 partners. The study provides data both
for the entire sample and broken down by number of partners per firm. For select questions, it provides data
on a per partner basis. Read More
The Survey of Law Firm Marketing Practices [November 4, 1999]
New York, November 4, 1999: American law firms spend an estimated 3.5 percent of their annual billings on
marketing, according to a new study just published by Primary Research Group. The study – The Survey of
Law Firm Marketing Practices (ISBN# 1-57440-040-1) – is based on a survey of 75 randomly selected American
law firms with a mean of 59 partners. It provides the survey data for the entire sample as well as broken down
by number of partners per firm. For select questions, it provides the data on a per partner basis.
Read More
The Survey of Adult and Continuing Education Programs in Higher Education [November 4, 1999]
New York, November 4, 1999: 68.66 percent of adult and continuing education programs in higher education
offer courses through distance learning, according to a study recently published by Primary Research Group,
Inc. The two-volume study – The Survey of Adult and Continuing Education Programs in Higher Education
(ISBN# 1-57440-037-1) – is based on a survey of 70 randomly selected adult and continuing education
programs throughout the United States. The study provides data for the entire sample as well as data broken
out by type of control of the college (public/private), level of the college (two-year/four-year) and number of
students enrolled in the college. Read More
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