"Does the West Control the Russian Market in Marketing Research?": Interview with Dmitrii Pisarskii

2006 ◽  
Vol 44 (5) ◽  
pp. 85-91
Author(s):  
Dmitrii Avdienko
2021 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Olga Medvedeva ◽  
Elena Rykova

The article considers the actual factors for the development of light industry enterprises – the transition of the interaction of the "producer-consumer" system to the digital space using the Internet; application of the customization function in the production of light industry goods and the development of a model of conscious consumption. The presented results of marketing research demonstrate the interest in fashion of a larger number of consumers under 35 years old and confirm the global trend of interest in the global network as the main source of information about fashion. The results obtained reflect the global statistics on consumer awareness of fashion innovations and new products that they receive from the worldwide Internet. The desire to integrate the consumer and the manufacturer using online channels is relevant and in demand both in the global and in the Russian market, based on which we can talk about the use of modern means of interaction. Active segmentation of the market leads to the fact that the consumer becomes more differentiated in terms of their values and tastes, social and demographic status, which in turn changes the demand: it goes from mass to the category of segmented. The authors considered the emergence of the phenomenon of mass customization in global practice and the main approaches to using this tool in the market. Customization is a tool by which the manufacturer and the client come to a common decision regarding the finished product. It was found that economists Joseph Pine II and James H. Gilmore propose four levels of customization, which are called collaborative, adaptive, cosmetic, transparent (joint, adaptive, cosmetic, transparent), respectively, which most fully reflects the levels of implementation of customization in mass production. In this article, the authors review the experience of the two largest sports goods manufacturers in the field of sustainable production and consider the new direction of "slow fashion" (slow fashion) as the basis for the introduction of the customization function.


2019 ◽  
Vol 46 (1) ◽  
pp. 29-52
Author(s):  
Elena Kochetkova

This article examines the nature of Soviet consumption and technological development through the history of milk and milk packaging between the 1950s and 1970s. Based on published and archival materials, the paper focuses on the role that milk played in Soviet nutrition and the role that packaging played in Soviet consumption. The article also examines the modernization of technology for making packaging as well as technology transfer from the West. It concludes that, as in many Western countries, both the Soviet state and Soviet specialists saw it as important to increase the consumption of milk after the war, but the meaning of milk changed. Milk, a basic staple for nutrition, became a matter of science and specialists sought to explain its positive effects. In addition, due to the development of the paper and chemical industries, new forms of milk packaging, more practical in their uses, were introduced in the West. Soviet leaders and specialists saw the new packaging as a desirable feature of modernity, but were unsuccessful in launching domestic technologies for manufacturing such packaging. While experimenting with domestic technology, Soviet producers also received foreign equipment for making milk packaging. Nevertheless, the capacity of such foreign equipment was not enough to satisfy growing demand and the consumption of “modern packaging” remained lower than in the West until the introduction of capitalism and, with it, foreign companies into the Russian market in the 1990s.


2019 ◽  
Vol 124 ◽  
pp. 05075
Author(s):  
N.V. Puzina ◽  
A.A. Vereteno ◽  
E.A. Luneva ◽  
N.V. Katunina

In this article, we consider the importance of lifestyle and preferences of the decision-makers as parts of management of loyalty in developing a company’s brand on the Russian oil and gas B2B market. We provide the definitions of the concepts of “brand” and “loyalty”, types of loyalty and development stages of a loyalty program. Additionally, we report the results of a marketing research for development of the loyalty program of the oil trading company (characteristics, opinions and preferences of the decisionmakers on the Russian market of light oil and liquefied hydrocarbon gas products).


Significance Belarus's leadership is navigating carefully between Russia and the EU, avoiding alignment with Moscow against the West and exploring ways of engaging Europe on trade. Cautious engagement with the West is accompanied by greater tolerance of domestic dissent -- up to a point. Impacts Manufactured and food exports will remain focused on the Russian market for the foreseeable future. The government's next task is to extricate itself from any awkwardness around the latest US sanctions against Moscow. President Lukashenka recently hinted at handing over some powers to government, but this is likely only after his departure. Even with some more freedom of public action, the opposition is unlikely to evolve into a cohesive force.


Author(s):  
O. Mudroch ◽  
J. R. Kramer

Approximately 60,000 tons per day of waste from taconite mining, tailing, are added to the west arm of Lake Superior at Silver Bay. Tailings contain nearly the same amount of quartz and amphibole asbestos, cummingtonite and actinolite in fibrous form. Cummingtonite fibres from 0.01μm in length have been found in the water supply for Minnesota municipalities.The purpose of the research work was to develop a method for asbestos fibre counts and identification in water and apply it for the enumeration of fibres in water samples collected(a) at various stations in Lake Superior at two depth: lm and at the bottom.(b) from various rivers in Lake Superior Drainage Basin.


1964 ◽  
Vol 2 (01) ◽  
pp. 6-12
Keyword(s):  
The West ◽  

In the West Nile District of Uganda lives a population of white rhino—those relies of a past age, cumbrous, gentle creatures despite their huge bulk—which estimates only 10 years ago, put at 500. But poachers live in the area, too, and official counts showed that white rhino were being reduced alarmingly. By 1959, they were believed to be diminished to 300.


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