Search
-
January 2020 Global Consumer Confidence: a mixed picture
Consumer sentiment is up in South Africa, the U.S., Great Britain, Argentina and Japan, but falls in Poland, Turkey, Sweden, Israel and South Korea.
SampleOnly
SampleOnly service giving you fast and direct access to Ipsos’ highly engaged respondent sources.
Custom Panel
Robust online proprietary panels for longitudinal research at scale
Total Operations
Total Operations is Ipsos’ Respondent Access and Data Collection Centre of Excellence.
Customer Counting
Driving sales conversion, transaction size and staff optimisation.
-
Global Consumer Confidence Index - April 2019
Consumer confidence up in France, Israel, and Spain; down in Latin America. The April 2019 reading of the Ipsos Global Consumer Confidence Index confirms a downward trend as it drops to 49.0. Over the past three months, the index has fallen by 0.9 point globally.
-
Women & Water: A Ripple Effect
In 2017-2018, Ipsos and the Water & Development Alliance (WADA) conducted a study to map the hypothesized direct gendered impacts (“women and water”) and the pathways to indirect empowerment impacts (“the ripple effect”) of water programming, and to collect primary data to assess whether these hypotheses can be supported.
-
Internet Security and Trust
A CIGI-Ipsos global survey reports that majority (52%) says they’re more concerned about online privacy than they were a year ago. Around six in ten feel that social media (63%) and search engines (57%) have too much power.
-
Ipsos Update - February 2018
Welcome to the February edition of Ipsos Update – our monthly selection of research and thinking from Ipsos teams around the world.
-
Audience Measurement 5.0 - Pushing the Boundaries
We are entering the Fifth Age of Audience Measurement. It is an age where methodologies are being re-calibrated in response to a fast-changing media environment and where the quest for total understanding of audiences is higher than it has ever been. It is also an era where politics and economics are far greater barriers to progress than technical concerns.