Sixty - one percent of
Hispanic women surveyed believe they will play a larger role than their partner in their next home purchase, specifically when it comes to: researching homes to visit (59 percent), researching communities or neighborhoods (58 percent), deciding which home to eventually purchase (54 percent) and researching the finances, such as mortgage options (43 percent).
The Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate & NAHREP
Hispanic Women Survey was conducted by Wakefield Research among 1,002 U.S. Latin American and Hispanic women ages 25 - 60, between August 4 and August 17, 2015, using an email invitation and an online survey.
Not exact matches
The study's findings about more than 1,000 Latin American /
Hispanic women ages 25 to 60 revealed that 91 percent of respondents
surveyed considered buying a home the best financial investment they could make.
The vast majority — 94 % — say they would give their industry a passing grade on diversity, a surprising result from a new
survey that counters the tech industry's own findings of a shortage of
women, African Americans and
Hispanics on their payrolls.
Little has changed in the past several years as the same
survey found six years ago that 80 percent of sitting principals were white, 10 percent were black and 7 percent were
Hispanic, with 52 percent being
women.
Late last month, the Federation of Asian Canadian Lawyers, the Ontario Bar Association's sexual orientation and gender identity committee, the
Women's Law Association of Ontario, the South Asian Bar Association, the Canadian Association of Black Lawyers, the Arab Canadian Lawyers Association, and the
Hispanic Ontario Lawyer Association teamed up to distribute its Bencher Candidate Equity
Survey to all candidates in this year's Law Society of Upper Canada bencher election.
We recruited respondents via Amazon's Mechanical Turk marketplace, and our final
survey sample consisted of slightly more men (56 %) than
women (44 %), with 78 % self - identifying as «White / Caucasian» (5 % African American, 5 %
Hispanic, 8 % Asian American) and holding a college or advanced degree (88 %).
While
Hispanic women are increasingly bilingual and value the Spanish language as part of their culture, tradition and identity,
survey findings on the importance of the Spanish language when it comes to participating in a home transaction may surprise real estate professionals and marketers.
Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate and NAHREP
Survey Finds That
Hispanic Women Are Taking Charge Among the Fastest - Growing Homebuying Demographic 91 % of
Hispanic Women, the New Power Buyers, Think Purchasing a Home is the Best Financial Investment They Can Make Read Full Release