Search
-
The Rising Tide of Private Labels: How name brands can stay afloat
By embracing innovation, building strong brand equity, enhancing the customer experience, and adopting strategic partnerships and omnichannel strategies, name brands can thrive in the face of competition.
-
Ipsos Update – June 2024
Generations, Equality, Pride … Ipsos Update explores the latest and research & thinking on key topics from Ipsos teams around the world.
-
Ipsos Update – May 2023
Generations, corporate purpose, climate change… Ipsos Update explores the latest and greatest research & thinking on key topics from Ipsos teams around the world.
-
We need to talk about generations - Understanding generations
Marketing is overrun with stereotypes, hot takes and clichés. Some of the most enduring in the first two decades of this century centred on the post-1980 millennials, who were proclaimed as a new generation that would completely disrupt business.
-
Ipsos releases Global Trends 2023: A new world disorder
As 2023 opens, we’re entering a new world disorder filled with crises on multiple fronts. The largest Global Trends survey ever, from leading insights firm Ipsos, shows that, globally, 74% agree that their government and public services will do too little to help people in the years ahead.
-
Global consumer sentiment growth has nearly halted
Consumer confidence is down in the world’s two largest economies
-
Citizens don’t expect national economies to recover anytime soon
Global survey finds onus to lead recovery is on governments and big business
-
World Youth Skills Day 2021: Worse mental health and wellbeing are seen as long-lasting outcomes of the COVID-19 pandemic for children and young people
On average, almost four in ten across 29 countries (a global country average of 37%), think worse mental health and wellbeing among children and young people will be a long-lasting outcome of the pandemic, according to new global study from Ipsos.
-
Workers want more flexibility from their employers after COVID
Survey of employed adults in 29 countries for the World Economic Forum finds one in four now working from home more often than before the pandemic; preference is for working remotely half of the time after it is over
-
Tension between rich and poor is seen as a key source of division around the world
Just over a third of people on average in 28 countries across the world (a Global Country Average of 35%) think that their country is divided by “culture wars” according to a new Ipsos Global Advisor poll, carried out in partnership with the Policy Institute at King’s College London. Despite this, however, there is wide variation in this opinion when looking at individual countries, and many don’t have a strong view.