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The Hong Kong New Normal Tracking Study - Thought Leadership Wave 22
Ipsos has been following Hong Kong residents’ reactions to the pandemic since march 2020. Through our New Normal survey we have observed the ups and downs of the people in the territory and analysed the implications for businesses and brand owners.
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Driving compliance at the frontline
This paper is recommended reading, by our Mystery Shopping experts, for any organisation – regulators and the regulated – interested in ensuring that frontline staff are adhering to regulatory standards and are treating customers fairly.
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Taking Real Steps to Address Climate Change
We share insights to help brands understand how consumers think of and act upon sustainability initiatives.
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Ipsos Update - January 2022
We start the year with a look at the global public’s predictions for 2022 and the latest research on the key issues ahead, including inflation, living with Covid-19, and climate change.
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Up close and personal: Humanising omnichannel
Humanising omnichannel means seamless customer journeys are just the start.
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A Year in Review - 2021
What did we learn about public attitudes and behaviours? What did our research tell us about the events of the year? And how did our outlook shift?
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Harnessing the Power of Data
The third paper in our “Future of Insights” series explores how organisations are evolving to harness the power of data and technology for better insights.
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Ipsos Update – December 2021
This month’s edition features stories on how global values are shifting, international threats and responses, the COP26 climate change conference, today’s retail environment, and perspectives on women’s experiences.
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Global Trends 2021: Aftershocks and continuity
Most people across 25 countries now it is more important that businesses fight climate change than pay the right amount of tax. Seven in ten globally now say they tend to buy brands that reflect their personal values and that business leaders have a responsibility to speak out on social issues. Around the world, agreement on the urgency of dealing with climate change continues to rise but many other social attitudes hold steady, despite COVID-19.