| Statistical
Research FAQ
- "How can I find Census Data?"
- "What other sources of aggregate
business data are available?"
- "How can I find data for Tompkins
County (or Ithaca)?"
- "How can I find market research data?"
- "Does the library have advertising
data?"
- "Does the library have access to
ABC (Audit Bureau of Circulation) data?"
- "What databases are best for statistical
research?"
- "What data is available for free on
the internet?"
- "How do I find a company's financial
data historically?"
- "Where can I find historical economic/financial
data for the U.S. or foreign countries?"
- "I need a kind of data not addressed
by this FAQ. Where do I start?"
1. "How can I find
Census Data?"
The U.S. Census
Bureau collects data on the population and economy of the
United States. Well known are the decennial Census of Population
and Housing, and the economic censuses the Bureau conducts every
five years. The Bureau also publishes the results of a number
of surveys each year, on topics such as crime, health, and poverty.
Census data at Cornell has traditionally been available in
print and on CD-ROM, but an increasing amount is available freely
at the Census
web site This site provides data from the economic
and population
censuses, as well as data from other surveys/reports published
by the Census Bureau. One of the easiest ways to access current
U.S. Census statistics is via their American
Factfinder portal.
2. "What other
sources of aggregate business data are available?"
- The Census collects a variety of information on business
in the United States. Access to this data is available via
the Bureau's Economic
Programs page. Programs include County Business Patterns,
Minority & Women-Owned Business, E-Commerce Statistics,
and more.
- The Survey of Current Business publishes sales data
at the industry level. It is available through Stat-USA.
In Stat-USA,
click on the SOTN Library and then click on Industry Statistics.
Stat-USA
also contains a variety of other business & industry reports.
3. "How can I
find data for Tompkins County (or Ithaca)?"
There isn't one authoritative resource for local statistics.
For Tompkins County information, we recommend
the following resources, depending on the type of data you need:
- County
Business Patterns provides industry data for Tompkins
County. It includes the number of business establishments,
number of employees, and payroll figures, all at the industry
(up to 4-digit SIC) level.
- New
York State Statistical Yearbook (HA 541 A35 in
Reference) provides county-level demographic data as
well as election data, local government finance, health and
human service data, and more.
- CareerSearch
to screen for a list of Ithaca or Tompkins County companies.
If you are looking for data specifically on Ithaca, try:
- The Census Bureau's American
FactFinder site for Ithaca data from the most recent Census
of Population (2000).
- Zip
Code Business Patterns for business data.
- CareerSearch
to screen for a list of Ithaca or Tompkins County companies
(search by zip code).
- SimplyMap
for population, household, income, and spending potential
data, with forecasts, available down to the Census block level.
4. "How can I
find market research data?"
Market research reports and/or statistics are available in
the following resources:
- Mintel
contains market research reports on a variety of U.S. industries
as well as on certain demographic groups, like teenagers.
It provides reports for the UK, US, and some other countries.
- Gartnerweb
provides market research reports on the Information Technology
industry.
- Choices
3 provides demographic analysis of the purchasers of many
goods and services, including specific brands.
- The Lifestyle Market Analyst (HF 5415.33 U6 L72
in Ready Reference) analyzes the demographics of people
with different "lifestyles," e.g. people who travel for business,
people who jog regularly, or people who own cats.
For a more complete list of market research sources available
at the Management Library, see our Market
Research Resource List.
5. "Does the library
have advertising data?"
The Management Library carries Ad$Summary (HF 5801
A18 in Ready Reference) which publishes company advertising
expenditures at the brand level by medium (newspaper, tv spot,
billboard, etc). Marketer’s Guide to Media (HF5826.5M34
in Ready Reference) has statistics on media trends and
advertising rates. Superbrands, published as a special
issue of Brandweek (HF 1040 A19 in Regular
Stacks) provides detailed analysis of the top 2000 U.S.
brands. Advertising Age (++ HF5801 A237 in Current
Periodicals & Oversize Stacks) is a journal that publishes
several special issues each year, such as the annual "100 Leading
National Advertisers" report (generally published in June or
September).
6. "Does the
library have access to ABC (Audit Bureau of Circulation) data?"
Current Cornell students have access to newspaper and journal
circulation reports from ABC. Ask
A Librarian to find out how to access this data.
7. "What databases
are best for statistical research?"
This depends on the type of statistics you are trying to retrieve.
- Equity and Equity Index data is available in Datastream
(when in the library) or remotely in Yahoo
Finance (U.S. stocks only.) Datastream
also contains historical, downloadable data on commodities,
currencies, country funds, macroeconomic data, and more for
countries worldwide.
- Historical corporate financial statement data is available
in many databases. Mergent
Online provides financial statements for U.S. and international
businesses, and is available remotely. Datastream
and Compustat
contain company accounts data for companies worldwide, but
must be used in the library.
- Demographic or business census data is largely available
at the U.S.
Census web site.
- Economic statistics can be downloaded from CEIC,
Datastream,
International
Financial Statistics Online and a number of other databases.
Ask
A Librarian for the one that will work best with your
needs.
- Market research data can be gathered in downloadable spreadsheet
format from Choices
3.
8. "What data is
available for free on the internet?"
There is a significant amount of data freely available on
the internet. Be careful to confirm the accuracy of your data
or stick with "official" data providers. Our list of free web
sites for Statistics,
Government
Information, and Demographic
Data provide some initial sites for you to check out. You
may want to browse through the subject areas of our list
of free web sites itself for sites containing the specific
type of data you need.
9. "How do I find
a company's financial data historically?"
Mergent Online provides spreadsheet financials in annual
and quarterly format, including 20 years of data (where available)
and uses each company's own statement template (providing more
detail about each company, but reports are less easy to compare
with those of other companies). Datastream
and Compustat,
which are not available remotely, have extensive company coverage.
Note: If you need an entire annual report, please read
our research guide for Finding
Annual Reports.
10. "Where can I find historical
economic/financial data for the U.S. or foreign countries?"
When you are in the library:
- Datastream
provides economic, stock, index, commodity, currency, and
other data and downloads in Excel format.
- CEIC
Data provides access to 1.2 million macro-economic time series
and statistics from over 50 countries.
- EIU Country Data and Euromonitor Passport contain standardized
statistics many countries.
- Fred,
a site of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, which provides
U.S. and some international data historically.
- Also, Yahoo!
Finance provides substantial U.S. stock and index histories
(Type the ticker symbol and click Get Quotes, then click on
Profile and scroll down and click the Historical Quote Data
link).
If you need to retrieve data prior to the 1970's, you will probably
need to speak with a reference person.
11. "I need a kind of
data not addressed by this FAQ. Where do I start?"
The Statistical Abstract of the United States (HA
202 C73 in Ready Reference; or online)
is a great way to start gathering data on almost any topic.
It pulls in tables from a variety of government and industry
data collection agencies. Basic data is supplied in the book;
users can go back to the original agency's data for more detail.
Online, FedStats
provides statistical data generated by many different U.S. government
agencies.
Still can't find the answer you're looking for? Send a question
to Ask
A Librarian or stop by the reference desk during reference
hours.
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