by RTi Research | Aug 15, 2019 | Creative Thinking, Creative Visualization, Data Synthesis, Meaning, Storytelling, Turning Data into Meaning
RTi’s Chief Meaning Officer, David Intrator, recently brought to our attention a YouTube critique of the open-source music notation software called MuseScore, and thought it could shed some light on how market researchers might better design their reports and... by RTi Research | Mar 20, 2019 | Data Synthesis, Insights Activation, Marketing Research Trends, Meaning, Quirk's Conference, Storytelling, Turning Data into Meaning
Sometimes the stars align just right.RTi’s Chief Meaning Officer, David Intrator, was reaching the highpoint in his presentation on story structure at the Quirk’s Event held earlier this month in Brooklyn. He was just about to play a video of a famous Super Bowl... by RTi Research | Mar 5, 2019 | Data Synthesis, Insights Activation, Marketing Research Trends, Meaning, Quirk's Conference, Storytelling, Turning Data into Meaning
As this post is being published, David Intrator, our Chief Meaning Officer, will be delivering a talk at the Quirk’s Event in Brooklyn entitled “You’re Boring Me | How Story Structure Keeps People From Tuning Out.” Intrator, who was awarded Best Presentation at last... by RTi Research | Oct 9, 2018 | Analytics, Big Data, CRC 2018, Creative Thinking, Creative Visualization, Data Synthesis, Insights Activation, Marketing Research Trends, Meaning, Storytelling, Turning Data into Meaning
Our world is awash in data. 2.5 exabytes are produced every day, the equivalent of 250,000 Libraries of Congress or 90 years of HD video. And the pace is increasing. Whereas in 2013 the total amount of data was 4.4 zettabytes, a vastly huge number in itself, it’s... by RTi Research | Aug 14, 2018 | Analytics, Creative Thinking, Data Synthesis, Meaning, Storytelling
Arnold Toynbee was one of the most important scholars of the 20th century. Best-known for his monumental, 12-volume A Study of History, he’s also considered the author of this famous quip: “Some historians hold [incorrectly] that history…is just one damned thing after...