Despite saving on design costs, 60 per
cent of respondents reported that they typically spent more than $ 500 annually on print promotion.
A full 97 per
cent of respondents reported that marketing and business development staff were highly or somewhat involved in supporting and implementing their firm's strategic priorities, while only 36 per cent participated in setting them.
Many reports over the past few years have signalled that schools are finding it harder to recruit — for example, in a 2015 survey by the National Governors Association, 43 per
cent of respondents reported it was difficult to find good candidates when recruiting senior staff.
In addition, the data shows 57 per
cent of respondents reported cuts in classroom - related support staff posts.
The survey also found that 62 per
cent of respondents reported difficulty recruiting teachers for non-core subjects, and 65 per cent finding recruitment more difficulty than in previous years.
In the run - up to the December 2011 Duma elections, 60 per
cent of respondents reported being interested in the upcoming elections in the preceding month.
Australians were in the middle, with 60 per
cent of respondents reporting weekly sex, but interestingly, only 42 per cent of those were sexually satisfied.
60 per
cent of respondents report that the number of support staff has decreased in their school.
In Alberta, where the economic effects of the worldwide oil price plunge has hit hardest, the numbers are even more stark, with 66 per
cent of respondents reporting a no - change approach, plus another seven per cent who will give their clients a price break in the next year.
Not exact matches
Farmers
reported solid income expectations, with 73 per
cent of respondents expecting similar or improved incomes compared with 2013.
It is known that people tend to overestimate the share
of immigrants (for instance Ipsos 2014
report shows that British
respondents think that 31 per
cent of population consists
of foreign - born
respondents, where the figure is closer to 13 per
cent according to 2011 Census); here we also show that people's estimations
of levels
of immigration do not correspond to actual change in their local areas, it is the perception that seems to be linked with anti-immigration vote.
Regulation In 2005 67 per
cent of respondents to the FSB's
report «Inspector at the Door» claimed that there were moderately serious to serious costs involved in form - filling and providing information to regulators.
Some 526 (33 per
cent)
of respondents reported that they had experience a break up within the last five years.
Morrison found that (37 per
cent)
of respondents who had experienced a break up within the last five years
reported being a victim
of online abuse from their former partner.
However, there are signs that the situation is improving in the first two
of these areas, with about eight per
cent fewer
respondents reporting such requests in 2017 and 2018, compared to 2016, while the proportion in the third area was broadly similar.
Although only 253 female teachers responded to several thousands
of surveys distributed,
of those
respondents, 88 per
cent of those had been in the teaching industry for more than 10 years and 90 per
cent were principals or school leaders, NESLI
reported.
The 2017 survey showed principals and deputy or assistant principals experience a far higher prevalence
of offensive behaviour at work than Australia's general population, with 44 per
cent of respondents having received threats
of violence, and one in three principals
reporting actual violence.
School leaders in London and the South East also
reported recruitment difficulties due to high housing and living costs, with 63 per
cent of respondents from inner London citing this as an issue.
A poll by public service Unison has found that 47 per
cent of respondents to a poll
report that support staff have been cut in last year as funding has become tight.
Thirty per
cent of survey
respondents found applying to university difficult, 40 %
report receiving little support from their school in planning their application, and 38 % say they felt intimidated when applying for university — highlighting the value
of supporting young people during the process.
We asked
respondents to
report if they thought that more than 40 per
cent of their students had experienced certain issues or feelings.
47 per
cent of survey
respondents reported the decline
of local authority services as a cost pressure on schools, in particular the abolition
of the Education Services Grant (ESG) to local authorities which is being passed through to schools.
The third most quoted source
of financial pressure
reported by school leaders was the cost
of dealing with the additional needs
of pupils,
reported by 83 per
cent of respondents.
The most commonly
reported cost saving was reducing investment in equipment, which 85 per
cent of respondents said they were having to do.
The ballot also discovered that: 96 per
cent of respondents lacked confidence in proposed Scottish Qualification Authority (SQA) measures to reduce workload in the 2016 - 17 session; 94 per
cent of respondents said they lacked confidence in the SQA's plans to reduce workload; and the Tackling Bureaucracy
Report, a Scottish government initiative from March 2015, had failed to reduce teachers» workload in 96 per
cent of schools.
Almost all (457
respondents) had received
reports of pupils encountering upsetting material on social media — such as sexual content, self - harm, bullying, or hate speech — with 27 per
cent saying incidents were
reported on a daily or weekly basis.
80 per
cent of respondents said they believed the situation was worse or significantly worse than 12 months ago, with 73 per
cent reporting that they have had to use supply teachers to fill vacancies and 71 per
cent saying they have had to use non-specialists — those without a degree in the relevant subject — to teach classes.
A total
of 73 per
cent of respondents of the joint ATL and NUT survey said their school had cut spending on books and equipment, while 46 per
cent reported cuts to ICT.
Nearly three quarters (74 per
cent)
of respondents said commissioning local services was also a major issue, as well as a «lack
of internal capacity», where 59 per
cent reported it as barrier.
While teaching staff cuts are currently less significant in primary schools, 21 per
cent of survey
respondents reported that they have had to reduce teaching staff.
However, just 52 per
cent of respondents believed that grouping by ability actually works, according to the
report, entitled «Grouping in early years and key stage 1», which surveyed 1,373 teachers and involved interviews with teacher focus groups at four schools.
According to creditcards.com, their 2016 survey
reported that 40 percent
of the
respondents preferred to use credit cards, 35 per
cent for debit cards while 11 % per
cent of the
respondents preferred to use cash.
Sixty - seven per
cent of respondents said their firm paid associates a general bonus in 2010, with 70 per
cent reporting that such payments were discretionary.
More than 95 per
cent of law department
respondents reported their company provides benefits and 65 per
cent offer perks such as professional development and health club memberships.
In 2002, the consultation
report Modernising the Civil and Family Courts reviewed the new regime and found, contrary to the forebodings above: «Eighty - two per
cent of respondents to the Law Society Woolf Network 3rd survey said that protocols were generally complied with but 68 % said that breaches did not attract a sanction.
In the last five years, 81 per
cent of respondents said there were either many more or more cases with litigants without representation, 19 per
cent said it was roughly even, and no one
reported fewer litigants without representation.
Research firm Gartner analyst Tom Bittman recently
reported that 95 per
cent of respondents in one
of its surveys found some aspect
of their IaaS private cloud has «gone wrong.»
The short - term news was good at 56 per
cent of responding firms, where partner earnings increased last year, according to the survey, although that figure may have benefited in part from the de-equitization
of partners, which was
reported at around nine per
cent of respondents.
Globally, CLOs in companies with large law departments were more likely to
report being targeted, with 56 per
cent of respondents in departments with 50 or more employees saying they have been targeted, versus 29 per
cent of respondents in departments with fewer than 50 employees.
But still, the TD study found that only 39 per
cent of survey
respondents reported purchasing the appropriate travel insurance to relief their stress.
Respondents reported 86 per
cent of organization heads are men, as are 72 per
cent of line managers.
In 2005, the final
report of the Victorian Taskforce on Violence in Nursing referenced research that found as many as 95 per
cent of nurse
respondents had experienced repeated episodes
of aggression in the past year, with 80 per
cent reporting multiple episodes
of physical aggression.
Many Indigenous peoples are bilingual; however, the pattern varies with geographical location with 56 %
of respondents living in remote areas
reported speaking an Indigenous language, compared with one per
cent in urban centres;
Rental landlords, take note: a survey commissioned by the Ontario Tobacco - Free Network (conducted by Ipsos Reid) that researched drifting second - hand smoke in multi-unit dwellings (March 2007),
reported that 64 per
cent of Ontario
respondents would prefer a smoke - free building if such a choice was offered.
Use
of social media information such as Facebook or Pinterest was
reported by 54 per
cent of respondents.
The
report says corporate executives and entrepreneurs are expected to be the most active investors, representing 25 per
cent and 19 per
cent of respondents respectively.
* 46 per
cent of the survey
respondents reported that first - time homebuyers look at five to 10 homes, on average, before making a purchase.
Almost half
of survey
respondents reported less than $ 30,000 income per year, and a significant percentage
of these individuals spend more than 30 per
cent of their income on shelter costs, meaning that many seniors continue to reside in homes they are unable to afford.
The information gathered concerned the fiscal year ending 2005, with
respondents reporting an average profit
of nine per
cent.
While nearly half
of the Coldwell Banker survey
respondents reported that affordability was the No. 1 concern for this group, 82 per
cent said today's first - time homebuyers consider move - in conditions to be very important when searching for homes.