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Open Banking Series IV │ Which Financial Institutions in China are More Expected by Clients in the Environment of Open Banking?
In the era of booming sharing economy and platform economy, shared bicycles, shared hotels and shared resources emerge in the market one after another, but there is no open financial shared platform, and the development of financial industry lags behind the trend of the sharing era.
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Open Banking Series II | Faced With Open Banking, Four Client Groups Are Formed in China
Open banking is a new model of financial data sharing created in the era of sharing economy, and under this model, the traditional banks and financial technology companies will experience deeper cooperation and competition, resulting in a new round of dramatic changes to the financial services industry. Such dramatic changes are penetrating into all aspects of the industry.
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Open Banking Series I │A Wave of Open Banking is Coming, Are Chinese Consumers Ready?
Banks have been the main institutions that master the clients’ financial data for a long time, and the shared financial data initiated by the open banking may be an “earthquake” reversing the banking industry and will exert a revolutionary influence on the global banking industry. A wave of open banking is coming, are Chinese consumers ready?
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Ipsos Update – January 2018
Happy New Year! Welcome to the first 2018 edition of Ipsos Update – our monthly selection of research and thinking from Ipsos teams around the world.
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Ipsos Update - December 2017
Welcome to the December edition of Ipsos Update – our monthly selection of research and thinking from Ipsos teams around the world. To mark the end of the year, this month’s edition also includes a special section showcasing some of our highlights from 2017.
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Ipsos Update – November 2017
Welcome to the November edition of Ipsos Update – our monthly selection of research and thinking from Ipsos teams around the world.
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Device Agnostic
A growing number of respondents attempt to take surveys using a mobile device (smartphones, tablets and laptop).
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Mobile
Over the past few years, we have seen an increased proliferation of mobile across the world. Not only have we seen the number of mobile users grow worldwide, but we’ve witnessed increased engagement of consumers with their mobile devices for a variety of everyday activities, whether it’s watching videos, shopping and making purchases, or simply accessing the internet. We are now past the mobile tipping point, with mobile overtaking fixed internet access in many markets, across developed and developing economies. Consumer interactions with brands are, more than ever before, fragmented and multi-layered. Consumers are leading busy lives, and multi-task routinely in their day. Consequently, many of the planned brand exposures are missed and recall relevancy is eroding faster than expected.