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Wiebke's work pearls

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Single Market Monthly. Good examples of EU funded projects. European Commission Brussels, 7 February 2013 Investing in our future: Good examples of EU funded projects The European Union budget is relatively small (around 1% of EU GNI), but it can make a big difference. Around 94% of the European Union budget supports researchers, businesses, farmers, regions, young people and many others.

Too little is known about the concrete projects on the ground and how they bring about concrete results and benefits for citizens and businesses as well as for the wider European economy. This non-exhaustive list of good EU projects gives you an idea. Did you know for example that the EU supports solutions to traffic and environmental problems in European cities, that it helps to preserve our environment, allows for energy savings and makes our economy more sustainable?

Environment + Climate change research 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. Health research 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. Bioeconomy research 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. Prezi. DG ENER Prezi. Julie-Jeanne's Prezis. Join the debate on Europe. Visual facilitation. Talk and Draw. Bigger Picture. SZ. Charlemagne. Stefan Niggemeier. Euonym.eu. Waltzing Matilda. Number of views : 85 Rating: 5.0/5 (3 votes cast) @marcorecorder There are literally thousands of social media analytics tools out there. When you get accustomed to one tool you might get the feeling that you are missing out on something. And that other analytics tools can offer incredible, flashy and (apparently) indispensable features that would ease your work or provide you with some data which would help enrich your social media reports. This is something I always try to stress as a social media analyst: the fact that other tools may offer “more”, doesn’t mean that other tools can offer what you actually need.

There are thousands of tools out there offering more or less the same data, stats etc… and that try to differentiate themselves by adding some (sometimes insignificant) features. The question you should ask yourself is “what data do I need in order to produce a good report about my social media activity, campaign or project?” Secondly, investigate which tools provide this data. Harvard Business Review - blog.