Search
-
Ipsos Update – January 2024
AI, inflation, predictions for 2024… Ipsos Update explores the latest and greatest research & thinking on key topics from Ipsos teams around the world.
-
Data dive: 2023 in review
In 12 infographics, we look back at key Ipsos Global Advisor polls from a year that was filled with a few very high highs and some really low lows.
-
Canadians Increasingly Believe (88%, +3) that Children Around the World Face a More Frightening Future than when They Were a Child
Nine in Ten (89%, + 7 pts) Canadian Parents Fear for their Children’s Future
-
From "Everything Everywhere All at Once" to "Not Much, Anywhere, Anytime Soon"?
Access our annual Almanac for Ipsos' reflection on ESG in 2023 and guidelines for 2024.
-
Global predictions for 2024: Optimism is on the rise as more think next year will be better
However, people expect climate change to worsen in 2024, the Ipsos Predictions survey finds
-
[WEBINAR RECORDING] KEYS - The Year in Review: Opportunities in the Polycrisis
Join Ipsos for its complimentary KEYS webinar series dedicated to helping brands and organizations better understand the dynamics of today as they prepare for tomorrow.
-
Canada: Still the safe haven of old?
Is Canada the Canary in the Coal Mine? Welcome to the Ipsos Almanac – our annual review of how the events, trends and surprises of the last 12 months will shape what happens next.
-
Ipsos Update – December 2023
Risks, nations, AI… Ipsos Update explores the latest and greatest research & thinking on key topics from Ipsos teams around the world.
-
2023 IG Financial Confidence Index: A Continuation of the Downward Trajectory Started Last Year
Concerns over the direction of the Canadian economy are driving pessimism.
-
People still feeling the pinch, fed up with ‘shrinkflation’ as 2023 wraps up
The latest wave of the Ipsos Global Inflation Monitor finds people across 33 countries will have more money to spend in the next year as red-hot prices cool off slightly in many places; and almost half of the global public are seeing red over products getting smaller but prices staying the same.