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Ipsos Update - December 2019
This month’s edition of Ipsos Update features the latest research and thinking from Ipsos around the world on the future of mobility, world affairs, survey sampling and global infrastructure.
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Ipsos Update - November 2019
This month's edition of Ipsos Update features recent Ipsos research and thinking on mental health, Black Friday and retail trends, brand-building and climate change.
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Customer intelligence of audience attitudes on top 3 dating apps
What people are saying online about Tinder, Bumble, and Hinge.
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Social media monitoring the fast-paced landscape of climate change conversations
The view from online: unfiltered, uncensored & unsolicited.
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The future of healthcare market access: three disruptors & three enablers
What disruptive trends will shape the healthcare landscape of the future? What will companies need to do to facilitate successful delivery of value and access?
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Four in five say mental health as important as physical
Four in five say mental health as important as physical – but just one in five think NHS treats it that way. The research, by Ipsos and the Policy Institute at King’s College London, reveals attitudes towards mental health around the world.
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Ipsos Update - October 2019
This month's edition of Ipsos Update features recent Ipsos research and thinking on trust, customer experience, populism and nativism and our new edition of Flair South Korea.
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Will agile methods save management from its existential crisis?
A survey conducted by Ipsos and the Boston Consulting Group (BCG) in five major countries (China, France, Germany, United-Kingdom and USA) reveals a genuine distress amongst the managing population and a general aspiration from both managers and their teams for a new model.
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Awareness of United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals is highest in emerging countries
Three-quarters of adults globally have at least some awareness of the Sustainable Development Goals.
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It’s a fact, scientists are the most trusted people in world
New Ipsos Global Trustworthiness Index shows that 6 in 10 globally rate scientists as trustworthy followed by doctors and then teachers.