The Pew research goes on to share that of those with college degrees, 74 percent go online via their mobile phones. And those considered affluent or cellphone users with household incomes of more than $75,000 annually go online using their mobile …
“Luxury marketers should be heartened that the affluent represent good potential for holiday gift sales if they are presented with attractive product options and good value,” said Ron Kurtz, president of the American Affluence Research Center, Atlanta.
In 2009, these products ranked 9th among the country's top 10 export items behind garments, footwear, crude oil, seafood, electronics, computers and spare parts, wood and wood products, rice and rubber. One year later, they climbed to fourth place …
Over the past year Aldi has become the darling of the recession-hit middle classes attracting an extra one million, mainly affluent, shoppers who have helped to double profits, latest accounts released today show. Such rapid growth has forced the …
Founder and CEO Landy Ung says users will find savings on a wide variety of products and services, everything from Halloween costumes to travel, all geared to where they happen to be. “Right now I'm eyeing a deal from Living Social for New Years Eve …
In 1958, Harvard economist John Kenneth Galbraith published his bestseller, “The Affluent Society,” which profoundly influenced national thinking for decades. To the Great … Companies often pay up rather than face a threat to their products …
San Francisco — Entrepreneur Nicole O'Rourke has a novel idea for raising cash that would have been illegal until last week: smacking a "fund me" sticker on every bottle or can of hair products from her start-up business, Rock Your Hair. O'Rourke is …
Food Vision 2013, Caroline Scott-Thomas, Editor of FoodNavigator.com (far right), led a panel discussion on sustainability with (from left) Oswaldo da Costa e Silva, PhD, VP Nutrition Improvement Program, DSM Nutritional Products; Dr Sally Uren, Deputy …
This money piled up not just because the Chinese are such religious savers, but also because China initially didn't move aggressively enough to expand public investments in the things that countries typically spend money on when they become rich …