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Ipsos Update – March 2021
Our monthly round-up of Ipsos research and thinking reflects on the world one year on from Covid-19, looks forward to the world in 2025 and beyond, and presents new white papers on customer experience, product innovation and research methods.
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Ipsos Update - February 2020
This month’s edition of Ipsos Update features the latest research and thinking from Ipsos around the world on gender, shopper behaviour, entertainment in India and young people.
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Ipsos Update - December 2019
This month’s edition of Ipsos Update features the latest research and thinking from Ipsos around the world on the future of mobility, world affairs, survey sampling and global infrastructure.
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Device Agnostic: What Marketer’s Need to Know
Device agnostic is the new research reality. Today, over half of the global population use smartphones – a number predicted to rise to 70% in 2021. There is no doubt that allowing respondents to take surveys on smartphones represents a critical tipping point for our industry. We must adapt quickly to stay connected to consumers, but with that comes risk as we need to rethink questionnaire design to meet respondents’ expectations on mobile.
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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.