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Ipsos Update – June 2024
Generations, Equality, Pride … Ipsos Update explores the latest and research & thinking on key topics from Ipsos teams around the world.
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Ipsos Pride Survey 2024: Gen Zers most likely to identify as LGBT+
Our new survey across 26 countries finds gender, generational and geographical divides on everything from same-sex marriage to brands supporting the community
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Unraveling Global Beauty Trends
Review the latest global beauty trends and societal reflections by Ipsos in Switzerland beauty experts.
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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.
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Nation Brands Index 2023: Japan takes the lead for the first time in NBI history
For the first time in Anholt-Ipsos Nation Brands Index history, Japan finishes in first place, completing its steady climb from fifth place in 2019. Germany drops down to second after a six-year reign, while Canada remains in third place overall. The United Kingdom and the United States climb the ranks and place fourth and sixth, respectively. Italy drops one rank and places fifth, while France sees the largest rank change within the top ten and falls from fifth to eighth place.
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Introducing Ipsos RISE: first-of-its-kind, AI-powered insights platform for modern brand, risk and reputation management
Solution leverages the power of AI and Ipsos’ industry leading expertise as a single source of truth for brand and reputation management and reporting.
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21% of parents globally say their children have gone to bed hungry in the last month
A new global Ipsos study conducted on behalf of World Vision International in 16 countries reveals almost four in ten (37%) parents/guardians say their children are not getting the proper nutrients they need on a daily basis, and 21% say their children have gone to bed hungry in the last 30 days. Moreover, almost half (46%) of adults globally say they have worried about finding the money to buy food in the last 30 days, rising to 77% in low-income countries.
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57% globally think their country is not doing enough to meet its infrastructure needs
People continue to recognise infrastructure’s ‘double dividend’ but see substantial room for improvement.