Search
-
A Year in Review - 2020
This has been a year of momentous change – real and anticipated. As we pause to reflect at the end of the year, we present some Ipsos research highlights you may have missed during the dizzying events of 2020.
-
Europeans and Intellectual Property
Ipsos is pleased to announce the results of the third wave of European Citizens and Intellectual Property.
-
Food & Beverage Trends: Discover Ipsos POV
In this podcast and report, we talk about global & Swiss food trends. In addition, we cover the effects of Covid-19 on eating and cooking at home and away from home.
-
Taking action on sustainability
Sustainability is not only a relevant topic today, it is the long-term viability of a business.
-
Ipsos Update - November 2020
This month’s round-up of research and analysis from Ipsos around the world presents new papers on our learnings from the pandemic, trust in the media, brands and advertising and automotive quality. Explore our new global survey on happiness, the latest ranking of 50 nations’ international image, and much more.
-
Global “Nation Brand” Ranking: Switzerland performs within the top-10
The United Kingdom moves to second place, its best performance ever recorded, with reputational gains on the Governance, Culture, People, and Tourism Indices. Canada ranks in third place for a second consecutive year. There are major ranking slips in the top-10 with France’s ranking declining by three positions from second place in 2019 to fifth place in 2020, and the United States’ ranking dropping from sixth place last year to 10th this year.
-
World Luxury Tracking: Between new constraints & new expectations
Between new constraints & new expectations... A luxury that is reinvented, more aspirational than ever before. Ipsos unveils the results of its annual barometer of luxury consumption trends, the World Luxury Tracking (WLT) study.
-
Global majority seeks trustworthy news but may be vulnerable to disinformation
Ipsos research for the Trust Project finds limited appetite to pay for news and more confidence in one’s own acumen about the reliability of sources than in other people’s.