Motivation and engagement in online research communities
A study of motivational drivers to move beyond transactional relationships and towards meaningful research insights.
June’s edition of Ipsos Update presents our latest research and white papers on topics including mystery shopping, global views on Europe, ethics in social media research and ageing in Japan.
What happens when there is a mismatch between what a brand promises to its consumers and their actual experience? Fiona Moss from Ipsos Loyalty UK explores the promise-experience gap, the benefits of aligning the two and the pitfalls of over-promising.
What Worries the World is a Global Advisor survey in 28 countries. tracking whether people think their country is on the right/wrong track and what their top concerns are. This quicklinks document provides the latest global summary of the survey findings and links to the full decks for each country, in different languages.
At 49.3, the Ipsos Global Consumer Confidence Index in May 2019 is up 0.3 point against last month, but still down 0.5 point over the past three months, and down 1.4 points over the past 12 months.
This white paper unpacks the barriers to adoption and identifies the drivers that could propel product subscriptions forward and unlock consumer demand.
With most (86%) admitting to having fallen victim to it. three-quarters (78%) are concerned about online privacy & majority (53%) feels more concerned about this, compared to one year ago.
Ipsos 2019 SEA Syndicated Research Series. The first of Ipsos SEA syndicated reports, Financial Services in a Digital Age caters to the rapid evolution that is taking place in the personal payment space across 6 South East Asian markets.
Close to one year after the 14th General Election, Malaysians believe the country is moving in the wrong direction, as their main worries shift from Corruption to day-to-day issues like Crime and Inflation & Cost of Living.
The latest ‘What Worries The World’ survey, found that from June to July last year, Malaysians who believe that the country was heading in the wrong direction was at 25%.
Three months later, the figure rose to 36% and it currently has risen to 43% as of March this year.
Ipsos is proud to once again support the Investing in ASEAN guide produced by Allurentis in conjunction with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations. The guide contains some informative articles about industry challenges and developments in ASEAN.