Posts Tagged ‘zogby’
25 Years Deserves a Celebration!
Posted by: Leann in Picture Gallery on September 24th, 2009
September 12 marked Zogby International’s 25th anniversary. The Zogby team got together to celebrate 25 years of hard work and dedication. Meet the Zogby team!
Behind every great man there’s a great woman! Certainly this is true of Mrs. Zogby, John’s wife.

Zogby’s Security Guard, Richard Woodson, makes sure everything runs smoothly. He is joined by his wife, Rhonda.

Rita Charbel runs the call center during its busy late-night hours!

Sharon Jachim, our VP of Strategic Solutions

Zogby Chief of Staff, Mike Calogero, relaxing after a hard day’s work.

…and Zogby’s Project Administration team, led by Becky Wittman, VP of Project Administration, who is enjoying the celebration!

and Karen Scott. Pictured is Mitch and his mom, Karen Scott, who does a great job as Zogby’s Managing Editor and Senior Analyst. And Mike, having a rest after the football game.

The Project Administration team is assisted by our Editorial Department including our Writers and Analysts. Here’s Phil Vanno, Writer/Analyst and his buddy Paul Zogby, Systems Associate.

Monica Kachnikiewicz, HR Assistant and Call Center Trainer, enjoying the Lebanese food.

Nancy Manley and Zogby’s Call Center Manager Rose Kolwait.

Andy Stemmer, Systems Engineer.

Chad Bohernt heads the Marketing Department

with co-direction by Shane Nelson. Pictured is Sandy Nelson and her husband Shane, Government Contracts Executive.

Both are assisted by Anibal Abdella, Coordinator of Client Relations.

Here’s the Communication’s team, taking time away from twittering to celebrate 25 years. Jared Frank, joined by his significant other, Leann Atkinson, Director of Communications, Stephanie DeVries, Assistant Director, and Phil Vanno, Writer, Analyst, and serious Beatles fan.

Katy Schwalbe also assists the communications team as a Researcher.

…and last but not least, the Zogby mascots!
The Calogero family.

Dan DeVries and the Communications mascot, Lucy.

Ro Penz, VP of Finance, Missy Penz and Zogby’s System’s Department mascot, Cameron.

Editorial mascot Tyler and his mom, Chelan along with Communication’s mascot, Lucy, and her mom, Steph.

Administration mascot, Clare.

…and Editorial mascot, Tyler, who’s hoping to steal that cookie!

Prague IV
Posted by: Leann in The Global Odyssey on September 22nd, 2009
By John Zogby
First Globals™ are fascinating to me – and actually all audiences I have spoken to. I see heads nodding in affirmation when I describe this group because it captures their children, grandchildren, or themselves. In Prague, our discussion was very practical. The chair of Forum 2000 was the main organizer of our event – an American named Pepper de Callier. Pepper co-owns a major global head-hunting firm based in Prague and writes a column on trends in employment. Pepper was particularly struck by the mobility of First Globals™. Just what does the urge to travel around the world, to seek and actually experience new places and cultures, and to consider one’s self a “citizen of the planet Earth” mean for the future of work, workers, and employers?
First of all, the definition of work will change. Today’s 20-somethings will have had four “jobs” by age 30 and 10 jobs by age 40. Back in my day, that was considered unstable. Today it is a fact of life. Company loyalty certainly isn’t what it used to be and steady employment will actually be a series of projects – independently contracted, for a set duration of time. And the work can (and most assuredly will) be done anywhere. I hear a lot about “working from home”, but where is home? Today it may be in a parents’ home, tomorrow in Bangalore, and the day after in Panama City. Companies like IBM are both leading the charge, and following the trend with their “globally integrated enterprise”, multiple nerve centers and a mobile work force.
Secondly, what about job retention? That also will be redefined. To be sure, personal services employees (eg. restaurant servers, physical therapists, teachers) will be stationery, though they too may look elsewhere for better deals), but today’s 20-somethings employed in a global workforce will be constantly on the move. Employers will need to be sure that they can keep these Globals for the duration of a project and hope that the experience is positive enough for them to carry good will and positive references about their projects and workplace with them – for the next wave of new hires. It may look bleak for Globals at the moment, but in the growth economy that emerges they will be in the driver’s seat.
Finally many rules will need to be re-written. A new generation brings to the workplace a new set of circumstances. For example, a new look at privacy and openness. As I write in my book, The Way We’ll Be:
As to what such a high level of openness portends for society at large, I think I had a glimpse of that future in a chance encounter my wife and I had with a twenty-year-old waitress in Utica during the summer of 2007. In the course of a conversation about YouTube and public access, I asked our waitress about her own limits on what she would reveal.
“My boobs,” she answered, not terribly demurely, “but only on Halloween, and only for my friends.” “Well,” I said, “I’m your friend today, but tomorrow I might not be. Can you stop me from sharing your, um, breasts with the rest of the world, or with the company you’re hoping will hire you?”
“No,” she said, after some serious thought, “but so many of us do this in one form or another that employers are just going to have to adjust or they won’t have anyone left to hire.”
And thus, I remember thinking as she wandered off to the next table, what’s bad for beauty queens and teenage ingénues today becomes business as usual the day after tomorrow.
What do you think?
Prague Part III
Posted by: Leann in The Global Odyssey on September 18th, 2009
By John Zogby
Continuing my journey in Prague, I had a salon with members of the Young Presidents’ Organization chapter and senior leadership of Vaclav Havel’s Forum 2000 – a group of 25. The questions, as always, were varied. They wanted to know about President Obama’s recent visit to Prague, prospects for peace in the Middle East, and how long I thought this Great Recession might last. But we spent a lot of time again on the First Globals™.
One strand of our discussion related to the future of family. If mobility is the force behind First Globals™, what will bring stability to their lives? Will there be rules that tie them down? Will they regard parents as useful once they are exposed to more and more new technologies, new places, and new peoples that their parents have never experienced? Will there even be family meals? These questions were especially asked by younger parents. And I like being put on the spot in these kinds of situations: I need to be spontaneous, need to see the polling data flash before me, and need to provide answers to very complex concerns. I also like emphasizing the role I have spent for most of my adult life: an historian.
New changes in economies have always necessitated super-structural adjustments. Priests didn’t have to pray all day and night for the good hunt if the tribe had turned to agricultural and trade to sustain themselves. The role of women changed with the onset of agricultural economies. Feudal hierarchies no longer were relevant in dynamic economies based on investment, trade, large production, and the exchange of money. Children were needed to work in the fields to help seed and harvest for survival – but who was going to watch the kids when parents had to go into factories owned by someone else?
So adjustments have always had to be made with new economies. Back in the early 1990s I was asked to teach two courses in media and communications and I remember being a near-ranting Luddite about new communications technologies. The proliferation of the “personal computer” would atomize us humans, separating and isolating us from each other. I was greatly aided in my rants by Neil Postman’s Amusing Ourselves to Death – a still important jeremiad against new media. But I was so wrong. I underestimated my species’ need and capacity to build new communities, to seek out virtual relationships that were professional, fun, and even amorous. Like Richard Sennett’s The Fall of Public Man, a wonderful work of sociology that decries the loss of the public square and the village green, I guess I forgot back then that men and women will always need sociability and conviviality. And we have found it.
Just like the family. It is evolving. Those who want to keep the nuclear family intact play a useful role, but forget that the nuclear-size family is only a recent phenomenon. If change is so bad then should we bring back the tribe and tribal warfare? Do we really want all of our aunts and uncles and their offspring living happily under one extended family roof? The family is evolving and where it stops I just don’t know – but even then the new form will only be for a short while.
Trip to Prague, Part II
Posted by: Leann in The Global Odyssey on September 15th, 2009
By John Zogby
There were lots of questions and discussion from the next two groups in Prague about First Globals™. I was ably assisted by my son, Jeremy, who moderated both discussions. The first group was a chapter of Generation Next, about 20 or so First Globals™ themselves. They were university graduate and undergraduate students along with young professionals. They were Czech, Indian, Pakistani, Arab, and British.
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They were curious about their American counterparts. What made me so hopeful that American First Globals™ would eschew American nationalism and militarism? What if the U.S. were attacked again? Wouldn’t they turn inward and provincial? I’m happy to get questions like this because I can use real data to speculate on the trends and the future. To be sure, while not global in their outlook, the 20-somethings of the insular and isolationist 1930s U.S. changed from being typical to becoming the super-patriotic Greatest Generation of World War II — the change occurred with Pearl Harbor. But today’s young men and women did witness the attacks of September 11, 2001 and reacted in far different way. In fact, they turned even more outward. They have taken advantage of newer technologies and enter networks with friends and acquaintances without borders. They are curious about different cultures. They are the only American age cohort that does not believe that American culture is inherently superior to the cultures of Africa, Latin America, Asia, and the Middle East. They are the most likely to want to learn about Muslims.
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This is a global sensibility they will carry with them into their thirties and forties. Obviously no can predict what would happen in the face of another terrorist attack, but the values, experiences, and sensitivities of this group suggest plenty of reasons to be hopeful that the U.S. will not enter a new insular or militarist phase.
Zogby’s First Global Interns
Posted by: Leann in First Globals on September 11th, 2009
Every summer Zogby International hosts talented undergraduate and graduate student interns for an eight-week period. These students bring fresh ideas, and enthusiasm, and we have always been proud to host them here. Continuing in the tradition of Zogby’s summer interns, this summer we hosted a clever and ambitious group. We have in the past had students who are from across the country and from around the world, and this year was no exception. It is fitting then that we asked them to study trends among the First Global™ generation.
We’re proud of the work our summer interns accomplished this year and impressed by the findings in the data they analyzed. Here at Zogby International we have more than 25 years of research stored, and they had a field day choosing a topic and digging for data.
It is fitting as we launch Zogby’s Global Village, a tribute to Zogby’s involvement in our own backyard and across the globe, that we would want to showcase our interns’ work and share their talents with you.
Zogby’s First Globals and The Environment
Posted by: Leann in First Globals on September 11th, 2009
Javier Jaramillo is a junior at the University of Rochester majoring in Financial Economics and Mathematics.
To view Javier’s work, First Globals™ and the Environment, click here
25 Years of Polling
Posted by: Leann in The Global Odyssey on September 11th, 2009
By John Zogby
Today marks my 25th anniversary of owning a polling company. The following are all true stories. I actually did get calls in the early days when some customers heard I was a “pollster” and wondered if I would do their chairs and sofas. I actually did run for Mayor of Utica in 1981, worked with my community college students on polling my own race, and knew exactly how much I would lose by before anyone else. Obviously, I would rather be right than president. And there actually were a few “associates” when John Zogby Associates was born.
I have been very lucky – but luck happens to those who work very hard. Very hard! And plan, too. In the early days, we did fundraising for politicians and charities, retail advertising, and public relations to help feed us in between the polls and market studies. And beginning in November 1987, when only five of us were present, we established our annual Strategic Planning meeting where we established goals, then proceeded to meet quarterly to score our success or failure in meeting those goals. These meetings produced some momentous decisions. In early 1988, following one meeting, I trekked up to Watertown, NY, to check out the huge Fort Drum expansion that was drawing tens of thousands of new people into that economically depressed area. We launched the North Country Tracking Service which did quarterly household surveys to determine the values, behaviors, needs, and attitudes of these newcomers (vs. longer-term residents). This project became a cottage industry for us until the 1990 Census came out in 1992. It also broadened our name recognition which led to referrals to small cities, counties, and townships throughout the Northeast – and a growing body of more lucrative polling work.
By November 1991, we were ready to tackle New York statewide political polling. I funded the first of what would be eight quarterly polls designed to tackle New York’s presidential and state elections. Our first poll in early December 1991 showed then-Governor Mario Cuomo down by 6 points in his home state in a presidential match against then-President George H.W. Bush. The fact that the poll was released the day before Cuomo decided to stiff a campaign plane waiting for him on the tarmac at the Albany Airport and not fly in to New Hampshire to file for the presidential primary caused quite a stir. It was the top story on CNN’s Inside Politics that day. We polled through the 1992 cycle and became well-known in New York (and in key circles politically nationwide).
In 1994, the Zogby Poll was the only one to suggest early on that an unknown state senator named George Pataki could defeat Mario Cuomo. By September of that year, we got a contract to poll for the New York Post and Fox 5 in New York City. We completed daily tracking and many television appearances in this high-profile election and had the most accurate poll that year. We continued with the Post and Fox 5 until 2001. Meanwhile, our stellar track record for these media giants in the 1996 presidential primaries brought us an even greater opportunity. We nailed the New Hampshire primary and our performance in the Arizona Republican primary was accurate to the tenth of a percent. This was enough to bring our name to the attention of the Americas Executive Vice-President of Reuters, the global news behemoth. Our daily tracking of the 1996 presidential election was by far the most accurate and our worldwide brand was up and running. Lost in all the presidential hoopla was the fact that we were the only polling firm to correctly get the margin of victory of Senator Robert Torricelli in New Jersey.
By the time 35 Zogby International employees and advisors gathered for our annual meeting in November, posters were all over the conference room touting “Gallup, Harris, Zogby”. That was our goal and we were well on our way.
In 1997, we correctly polled the Virginia and New Jersey gubernatorial races – again the only correct poll in New Jersey. In 1998, we distinguished ourselves in Missouri and came closer to the margin of any poll in Illinois – this time polling for the St. Louis Post Dispatch.
In 2000, we (along with CBS News) were the only polls following the popular vote victory of Vice-President Al Gore over Governor George W. Bush. At the same time, we blew the New York Senate race, missing Hillary Rodham Clinton’s victory over Rick Lazio. No conspiracy, my friends, we blew it. But we got every other state right on the mark.
Since that time, our track record has been near-perfect. In 2002, 16 of 20 Senate races were correct. In 2004, my polling had George W. Bush beating John Kerry 49.8% to 48.4%. Bush won 50.8% to 48.4%. I did indeed “predict” a Kerry victory based on historical analysis and some pretty terrible network exit polling. But I have vowed to stick to what I do best – poll, not predict.
In 2006, 18 of 19 states nailed. And in 2008, we had Barack Obama leading by 10.4 points. He won by 7.3 points. Can’t be perfect all the time. But we were credited with being the most accurate of all pollsters in 8 of the 9 states we polled. This following 19 of 24 primaries that were correct.
Zogby International is now the second-best known name in polling in the U.S. This follows a lot of planning and very hard work. And it has been done with a gifted staff of tireless, smart professionals. And we still meet every November to look ahead to bigger and better things.
25 Years of Polling: Polling Alone
Posted by: Leann in The Global Odyssey on September 11th, 2009
By John Zogby
There have been critics all along the way since I began polling 25 years ago. Some were still sucking their thumb when I was accurately polling state and national elections. Actually, some are still sucking their thumb! Some raise honest methodological questions, which I am always happy to answer if the questions are respectful. Others are downright shoddy, mean, and puerile. Still others – and these intersect with both groups above – can only identify a good poll as one that agrees with their point of view. Throughout my tenure I have successfully branded Zogby International as innovative, pioneering, reliable, timely, and customer-oriented.
Here are some of the criticisms I have heard over the years.
- Partisanship – seems I have both a liberal agenda and a conservative agenda. My personal pedigree is very liberal but my company is militantly non-partisan. I interpret the numbers as I see them. I have no other agenda but to get it right.
- Showmanship – this comes from the envious critics. I have built a company that bears my name and I market it aggressively. I will continue to do so.
- Party Weighting – all pollsters apply weights for some demographic characteristics to ensure representativeness of their sampling. I have mainly relied on additional weighting for party identification. I don’t always do this but it is useful to reduce the potential for wide fluctuations in results of daily tracking polls. What troubles me is that some of my colleagues often have wild fluctuations in party ID in their samples. My non-weighted samples never involve significant drops or increases in party.
- Listed Telephone Numbers – the traditional thesis is that random digit dialing produces samples that are superior because it includes the many households that have unlisted numbers. Thus it meets the criteria of “probability” sampling, i.e. that every household has the same chance of being selected as every other. With landline penetration today being approximately where it was in 1963 (before the telephone was deemed appropriate for polling), the notion of pure probability is delusional. Add to that a significant reduction in response rates and the truth is that random digit dialing is more of a hindrance than preferred method. I have used random probability sampling of listed telephone numbers from the beginning – i.e. everyone who has a listed number has the same chance of being selected as everyone else. There is no demographic difference between listed and non-listed numbers and our studies continue to show this. Besides, our results are among the most accurate in the business.
- Online Polling – what many in the world of marketing, communications, universities, and social sciences understand, some still are not accepting. We have a representative on the task force of the Advertising Research Foundation, which is developing best practices and standards for online polling and research. Let’s face it, this is where polling and market research is heading and we at Zogby are once again ahead of the curve. Also, please face the fact that our track record in national elections has been near perfect. In 2004, our online national poll was even more accurate than our telephone poll (see my previous post). Some of our ugliest critics who use their blog forums to spew vitriol and half truths about us (and many other subjects) continue to suggest that our online poll in 2008 was off the mark. Consider that because of heavy traffic here we decided to stop the nationwide online poll on October 4, 29 days before the election, and stopped the battleground polls mid-October. At the time that our results came out in mid-October we were right at the national aggregate averages. In addition, we’ve had the guts not only to conduct online polls statewide but also to publicize the results of those polls. For a complete listing of our 2004 and 2006 statewide polling, visit our Interactive tab here. We continue to work on our polls, particularly at the statewide level and will continue to conduct online polls into the future and especially in 2010 elections.
I welcome honest criticism. But there are a few blogs where the principals never conduct their own polls, never show how they do their own work, and are just too venomous for my tastes.
We continue to grow and now poll successfully in 75 countries.
John Zogby at the YPO in Prague
While in Prague on his tour for The Way We’ll Be, John Zogby spoke to the Young Presidents’ Organization about the ideas outlined in The Way We’ll Be. The YPO is works “to transcend geographic and cultural barriers to inspire members, promote lifelong learning and address the challenges leaders face every day.
We’re currently making updates so that in the future, you will be able to view the video in its entirety instead of clips.
John Zogby at the American Center in Prague
While in Prague, John also spoke at The American Center, U.S. Embassy. Here’s the video including a question and answer session.
We’re working on our format so that in the future, the video can be viewed in its entirety and not in clips.