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Europe Affluents: Can Money Buy Happiness?
"Can money buy you happiness?" The Ipsos Affluent Europe Survey says: ‘Yes, it probably can’.
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Flair Colombia 2017 Reviving
“Reviving” is the word of the year in Colombia and in all the Colombians hopes and dreams. It is our very ambitious bet, thinking about Colombia as a case study in the modern history, where – unfortunately – a lot of countries moved from peace to war, as in Syria, Iraq, Somalia, Ukraine…
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Global Study Shows Potential For More Political Uncertainty Ahead
Many around the world believe their country is in decline and the system is rigged against them.
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Incremental versus Monumental Decision-Making
How to Keep Up with the Pace of Business in the New Reality - In this article, we will describe an alternative incremental approach to decision-making that keeps up with the pace of business in today’s rapidly and fundamentally changing world.
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Confessions of the Admen
In all walks of life and throughout history, people have projected their own worldview onto their surroundings to help better understand it: we also tend to use mental shortcuts (heuristics) to help us make decisions, but these can often be misinformed and ill-judged.
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Ipsos/Buzzfeed Poll Shows Global Support for Transgender Rights
Citizens in 23 countries polled: Spain and Sweden top list for supporting transgender rights.
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2017: High Hopes Or Dire Straits
Optimistic about the New Year? This and other questions asked in 25 countries around the world in this latest Global @dvisor poll.
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The European Affluent Splurges on Christmas Gifts
Christmas is just around the corner. How does the European Affluent celebrate Christmas? Here are some facts. 88% of all European Affluent celebrate Christmas.
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What Worries the World - November 2016
The majority (63%) of people around the world think things in their country are on the wrong track.
Unemployment currently occupies the top spot for global concern with 38% saying this. -
Five Hours Of Media a Day For The Global Affluent
On average, the Global Affluent spends 301 minutes on media per day which adds up to 5 hours. They spend 2 hours on watching TV and 2 hours online. Nearly an hour a day is spent on reading print.