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Ipsos Update – November 2022
Emerging risks, hybrid working and resilience in Ukraine… Ipsos Update explores the latest and greatest research & thinking on key topics from Ipsos around the world.
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Pandemic concerns recede, while rising prices drive value-driven purchases across SE Asia
The Ipsos SEA Ahead survey ran across Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Vietnam in May and June 2022
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[APAC WEBINAR] Oncology Essentials for Marketers and Marketing Researchers
Join Ipsos for a 30-minute introduction to the complex, fast-moving world of oncology
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The Perils of Prediction - A podcast with Ben Page
In this episode, you can hear our Global CEO Ben Page, and our Trends & Foresight Engagement Manager Rob Gear (both ably assisted by some voices from 1966) explain why and how we should take a different approach to facing an uncertain future.
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ESG: The Corporate North Star
The Purpose of purpose: having a clear vision about the kind of company you are is increasingly important in the ‘war for talent’, among generations who want to make a difference in their daily lives.
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Introduction to the Sixteenth sitting
Some would think it an understatement to say that the latest Ipsos' Reputation Council sitting takes place against an uncertain global backdrop. We seem to be in a perfect storm of social, political, and economic upheaval – the war in Ukraine, supply chain bottlenecks feeding inflation, and the lingering impact of Covid-19 are but a few of the factors impacting the world.
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[PRESS RELEASE] - State of the Malaysian Healthcare System
At 64%, trust in the Malaysian healthcare system outperforms the Global Country Average, and is 8th highest among the 34 countries surveyed.
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Majority across 34 countries describe effects of climate change in their community as severe
One in three globally brace themselves for being displaced from their home in the next 25 years: Ipsos survey for the World Economic Forum.
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[PRESS RELEASE] - Malaysians 'Tighten their Belts' as Inflation eats into income
- Inflation and poverty have eclipsed the pandemic as the main things Malaysians worry about.
- A majority of Malaysians are finding it difficult to manage financially, or feel they are just getting by. Compared to most major economies in Asia and the West, significantly fewer Malaysians would say they are living comfortably these days