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Ipsos unveils twelfth annual Top 10 Most Influential Brands in Canada
In a turbulent year, despite taking a pounding in the stock market, Google, Amazon, and Apple take the top slots reflecting their resilience. Walmart moved up and Facebook moved down while PC Optimum, the only Canadian brand in the top ten came in at #8.
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The Most Influential Brands in Canada, 2022
While Google, Amazon and Apple round out the Top 3, this year’s biggest Gainers (Spotify, TikTok, Winners) are climbing the ranks quickly. Here’s why.
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Many Canadians Unaware of Canada’s International Development Efforts
Roughly a third say their understanding has improved or has remained the same in the past two years.
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Fewer Canadians Rate Quality of Healthcare as Good (60%, Down 12 Points from 2020); Timely Access to Healthcare Receives Good Marks From Just 43% of Canadians
Most (83%) Don’t See Improvement to Quality of Healthcare Coming Any Time Soon as Future Outlook Deteriorates
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Speed dating with innovations: What’s your innovation’s pick-up line?
Discover how the communication of innovation has changed drastically, and how consumers have adapted to this new reality.
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More Money More Accountability: Six in Seven (86%) Canadians Want Increased Federal Investment in Healthcare; But Six in Ten (59%) Want Provinces to Show a Plan for Better Care To Get It
Canadians Intrigued With Increased Role for Private Healthcare. Six in Ten (59%) Support Private Delivery of Publicly Funded Health Services; Similar Proportion (60%) in Favor of Private Healthcare for Those Who Can Afford It.
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Ipsos Update - February 2023
Luxury, generation Z, the war in Ukraine… Ipsos Update explores the latest and greatest research & thinking on key topics from Ipsos teams around the world.
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New research: decoding internet fashion aesthetics
Synthesio experts explore 20 fashion aesthetics from apps like TikTok and Instagram
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[WEBINAR] How to Spot Unexpected Competitors and Brand Growth Opportunities
Join us on February 28 to hear tips for how to spot competitors, consumer signals, and commercial opportunities through the lens of social data.
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British Columbians’ Views on Freedom of Information and Privacy
BC residents strongly oppose private companies profiting from the sale of their personal health information.