Plus, there are several studies that have found the opposite, with both better sample sizes and methodology. If I were near my desktop, I could paste them for the terminally lazy, b/c I bookmark most BI articles and studies. I’ll do so if someone challenges me in early August - I’m traveling until then.
It’s a study. Not a very good one, but even bad ones can be informative. The interpretation leaves a lot to be desired.
P.S. The Center Square is also questionable. They characterize the study as a “massive study.” It was three-year, 3000-participant study at $1k/m. A total of $108k, over three years. “Massive” is vast exaggeration.
Plus, there are several studies that have found the opposite, with both better sample sizes and methodology. If I were near my desktop, I could paste them for the terminally lazy, b/c I bookmark most BI articles and studies. I’ll do so if someone challenges me in early August - I’m traveling until then.
It’s a study. Not a very good one, but even bad ones can be informative. The interpretation leaves a lot to be desired.
P.S. The Center Square is also questionable. They characterize the study as a “massive study.” It was three-year, 3000-participant study at $1k/m. A total of $108k, over three years. “Massive” is vast exaggeration.
Can you explain the $108k number and how you got it?
Decimal point displacement. Something I do all the time, unfortunately, when I’m doing mental math… I drop zeros. I consider it a character flaw.
$108M. A couple of orders of magnitude bigger, but still; over three years, far from “massive.”