Search
-
Singaporean workers want for flexibility from employers post COVID-19
Global survey of employed adults for the World Economic Forum finds 38% of Singaporeans now working from home more often than before the pandemic; preference is for working remotely 3 out of a 5-day week after it is over.
-
[Webinar] SEA Ahead: Singapore
Tracking citizen sentiment and consumer behaviour through the pandemic and beyond
-
Citizens don’t expect national economies to recover anytime soon
Global survey finds onus to lead recovery is on governments and big business
-
Global views on sports: 58% globally would like to practice more.
A new global Ipsos study conducted with the World Economic Forum explores attitudes to sports and finds that globally most (58%) would like to practice more but say they lack of time to do so (37%).
-
Ipsos Update – August 2021
Featured topics include obesity, sustainability, populism, youth skills and the Tokyo Olympics. We also take a closer look at the latest research from Russia and Africa.
-
AI-Enabled Consumer Intelligence is here
Forrester Spotlights AICI opportunity - and Synthesio's winning strategy
-
Global consumer confidence almost back to pre-pandemic level
Investment Index at its highest since October 2019
-
Singapore Youth: Improved Digital Communication Skills but Worse Mental Health and Wellbeing
The survey, carried out to mark World Youth Skills Day 2021, explores public attitudes towards COVID-19 and its impact on children’s education, wellbeing and skills development among 500 adults aged 18 – 65 years old in Singapore
-
Addressing the Sustainability Say-Do Gap
How brands can lead the way to activate consumer behaviour change in sustainability.
-
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.