A paltry
number of respondents think that all state and federal tests should be abolished.
Indeed,
a number of respondents thought open or modular offices showed disregard for people, dispatching that opinion — the APQC was chagrined to note — in «strong language.»
Not exact matches
Taking a closer look at the
numbers shows progress needs to be made across the industry, and counter to what the survey
respondents think, at more than half
of all tech companies.
14 %
of respondents believe that insider trading practices in the alternative investment industry have become less prevalent since the FBI arrested Raj Rajaratnam and scared the bejeezus out
of everyone, a noticeable drop from January 2016 when 25 %
of respondents felt this way; 37 %
of respondents think the news
of arrests and convictions there has had little impact on insider trading because those who engage in such practices
think they are smarter than everyone else and will never get caught, compared with 39 %
of respondents in 2016; and 49 %
of respondents believe the influx
of money into funds in recent years and the explosion in the
number of hedge fund firms has put enough pressure on fund managers that there will always be a few desperate enough to try anything, including insider trading, a significant increase from the 36 %
of respondents who felt this way in the Roundtable's previous survey on this topic.
One in five
respondents indicated they do not know if their plan's default is a qualified default investment alternative (QDIA), and half
of the small
number of plan sponsors who said an equity fund was their default mistakenly
thought that fund was a QDIA.
When asked for their
thoughts on the approximate
number of pets that enter shelters each year in North America, 84 percent
of survey
respondents said they believe the answer is less than 1 million pets per year.
When asked for their
thoughts on the approximate
number of pets that enter shelters each year in North America, 84 percent
of respondents said they believed the answer was less than 1 million.
(As I understand it, B. Verheggen is
of the opinion that the lower
number in their survey was actually due to a much more detailed / specific question, rather than the mean range
thought appropriate - that the
respondents didn't
think they could narrow it down to the specificity given)
Yes, it's true that the latest
numbers are an improvement over a similar survey four years ago (which was also roughly in line with Gallup at the time, showing that 52 percent
of respondents agree that humans are at least half - responsible for climate change), but the headline result these reports picked up on — that 96 percent
of respondents think climate change is happening — is moot.
The highest
number of respondents ever, he said - 41 percent -
thinks warming claims are exaggerated.
According to a survey by Deloitte in which it spoke to 1,000 corporate executive and private equity investors, 750
of the
respondents said that they
think the
number of mergers and acquisitions will increase in 2017 compared to last year, while 640
thought the size
of these deals will also increase.
Because I
think this year, the total
number of lawyers who were either solo or up two firms with nine lawyers with 60 %
of the
respondents.
It was also interesting to note that, while in 2011, 70 %
of respondents thought that competition from non-traditional services providers would be a permanent trend, in 2015 that
number is 83 %.
Respondents are also asked to rank the effectiveness
of each
of the above publications on a 1 - 10 scale, indicate whether they plan to increase or decrease the
number of submissions they produce, and estimate how much they
think in costs (in dollars) to produce a submission.
Respondent also found the problem in item
number 6 (I yearn to know all about him / her) as they were reluctant to answer it and perceived it comparatively irrelevant to investigate the personal life
of the lover or they might be threaten to violate the personal boundaries
of the lover or
think it is irrelevant to know the love as they accept him / her with all
of his / her strength and weakness.
A growing
number of respondents said they
think deal speeds might be slower in the next 12 months.