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Data Dive: How the COVID-19 pandemic shaped views
In 5 infographics, we break down what Ipsos’ global polling reveals about the coronavirus crisis’ impact on everything from where we want to work to concern about mental health.
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World Mental Health Day 2022: Three in four globally say mental and physical health are equally important
Mental health now ranks 2nd among global health concerns, overtaking cancer
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Ipsos Update - October 2022
Sustainability, inflation, healthcare… Ipsos Update explores the latest and greatest research & thinking on key topics from Ipsos around the world.
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Indonesia Flair 2022 - Connecting The Dots
Ipsos in Indonesia proudly released Connecting The Dots – an Ipsos Flair 2022 edition that reflects how Indonesia emerged from the COVID-19 pandemic, how Indonesia anticipated inflation & the energy crisis, and how digitalization and local brands dominated Indonesian consumer preferences.
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Globally, 3 in 5 citizens say abortion should be legal in all or most cases
Proponents outnumber opponents in 22 of 27 countries surveyed
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Almost three-in-ten citizens globally say they have started a business at some point
Entrepreneurialism is the spawning ground for small businesses which we know help drive the health of most economies. Small businesses took the brunt of pandemic shut downs and are now only recovering. So, what does the spawning ground look like now?
A new 26-country Ipsos poll finds that entrepreneurial activity is alive and well in some countries but lacking in others. -
Brand leaders share top tips for scaling social intelligence
Synthesio expert shares social intelligence program best practices and mistakes to avoid .
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Beyond the Hype: Innovation predictions in the era of Machine Learning
Artificial intelligence (AI) has grown in popularity in recent years. Voice and facial recognition software is developed in all technical gadgets. In this context, we are also beginning to see how AI can also alter market research, resulting in faster, cheaper, and better results.
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Earth Day 2022: awareness of government actions to combat climate change is low in most countries despite high level of concern
In a new global survey of 23,577 adults aged 16 – 74 in 31 countries, Ipsos found that climate change is a regular concern for half of people across a global country average. Concern is notably higher in Latin American countries, with Colombia, Chile, Mexico, Argentina and Italy all leading the way as those who think about the effects of climate change on their countries most frequently. Conversely Great Britain ranks in the bottom five countries who don’t think about climate change as much, beaten only by Japan, the Netherlands, Russia and China.