Inflation, the environment, Covid-19 and the war in Ukraine are all forces brands and retailers must consider ahead of Black Friday and Christmas shopping.
This monitor highlights the key online discussions and drivers of excitement around the World Cup, which are collected via crawling social data using Ipsos’ Synthesio tool. As the countdown toward the FIFA World Cup ’22 advances, the spotlight shined on the national team kits, whereby fans all over the world ranked their favorite and most disappointing ones. Moreover, speculations and curiosity around the first-ever winter World Cup were circulating, highlighting both concerns and thrill.
Ben Page opens this month’s edition of Ipsos Update with his reflections on a global environment of continued uncertainty. Between heatwaves and the continuing rise of inflation – a dark cloud overshadowing many of this month’s articles – consumer anxiety is evident.
We also focus on creativity in advertising and learn how behavioural science can lead to more successful product testing, alongside new global surveys exploring the public’s views on the most trustworthy professions and the legal status of abortion.
Topic Modeling will be available on the Synthesio platform on 20th July. Our AI-powered discovery engine automatically scans, categorizes, and visualizes hundreds of thousands of online conversations using the power of machine learning to help you uncover unknown or hidden phenomenons and make trend analysis much easier!
This month we feature new research on women in advertising, wellbeing in India, alongside updates on world opinion on globalisation, economic recovery, exercise and sports, and more.
On average, almost four in ten across 29 countries (a global country average of 37%), think worse mental health and wellbeing among children and young people will be a long-lasting outcome of the pandemic, according to new global study from Ipsos.
On average, almost four in ten across 29 countries (a global country average of 37%), think worse mental health and wellbeing among children and young people will be a long-lasting outcome of the pandemic, according to new global study from Ipsos.