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CRM September 1, 2005 David Myron |
Online Banking: Consumer Trust Versus Loyalty Identity theft victims' assurance of security reflects comfort levels with online banking, and not their loyalty to a particular bank.  |
CRM September 1, 2005 Coreen Bailor |
Nortel's Extreme Makeover Financial woes behind it, the telecom equipment provider is focusing on new products and brand awareness.  |
CRM September 1, 2005 DeFelice & Myron |
Microsoft Says 2.No Version 3.0 focuses on the SMB market with hosting options, Outlook integration, and marketing automation tools.  |
CRM September 1, 2005 Colin Beasty |
Surveys: A Dying Breed? Enterprise feedback management (EFM) solutions are replacing the old-school method of customer feedback.  |
CRM September 1, 2005 Colin Beasty |
Required Reading: Life After the 30-Second Spot An interview with author Joseph Jaffe who offers a bold mix of alternatives to traditional advertising and a set of new, revolutionary concepts that advertisers and marketers can follow for years to come.  |
CRM September 1, 2005 |
The Pulse: What is Your Company's Current Prospect Pursuit Plan? A chart representing reader responses depicting the percentages of companies' prospect pursuit plans.  |
Financial Planning September 1, 2005 Suzanne McGee |
Scandal! Corporate governance experts agree that the past two decades have been a particularly fertile period for scandals, generating an abundance of candidates for inclusion in a new series of "Wall Street Most Wanted" playing cards. What motivates the cheaters -- greed, fear or ego?  |
InternetNews September 1, 2005 Sean Michael Kerner |
Sun Rises on StorageTek Sun discusses its plans for StorageTek -- including the future of the StorageTek name -- and analysts share their opinions of the new acquisition.  |
The Motley Fool September 1, 2005 Nathan Parmelee |
Ohayou, 7-Eleven Japan. Sayonara, 7-Eleven. 7-Eleven Japan makes a $32.50 per-share buyout offer for the portion of 7-Eleven that it doesn't already own. With shares currently trading at a 6.5% premium to 7-Eleven Japan's offering price, the market obviously feels the offer is low.  |
The Motley Fool September 1, 2005 Stephen D. Simpson |
Haggar Not So Haggard Haggar accepts a generous takeout offer. An investor group that includes a Chinese manufacturing company has stepped up and offered $29 a share in cash for the company. Investors, take note.  |
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