Generative AI, equality, refugees… Ipsos Update explores the latest and greatest research & thinking on key topics from Ipsos teams around the world.
Inflation, agriculture, eCommerce… Ipsos Update explores the latest and greatest research & thinking on key topics from Ipsos teams around the world.
Ipsos Update
The Ipsos Africa Centre for Development Research and Evaluation is a team of development researchers and evaluators based in our Ipsos offices across Africa. We employ a wide range of methods and approaches and work with deep local expertise to provide high-quality evidence to address development challenges.
The COVID-19 pandemic continues to impact societies, not only in terms of health, but also social and economic conditions and day-to-day life.
New report provides African governments real-time information and guidance to find the balance in Coronavirus response.
Welcome to Ipsos Update – our monthly selection of research and thinking from Ipsos teams around the world. September’s edition features new papers on mystery shopping in the luxury industry, in-app advertising, and affluent travel, as well as case studies on social media data in India and current economic and demographic trends in Serbia.
Welcome to Ipsos Update – our monthly selection of research and thinking from Ipsos teams around the world. August’s edition features new papers on cultural bias, electric vehicles and Gen Z, as well as global reports on healthcare and human rights.
Running global Customer Experience studies provides both better value for money than individual country studies and a degree of standardisation across markets. However, their validity remains at risk from an age-old research problem: cultural bias.
July’s edition features new papers on ethnography, audience measurement and food waste, as well as new global reports on the inclusiveness of nationalities and artificial intelligence.
Global survey by BCG GAMMA and Ipsos finds overall optimism toward Artificial Intelligence in the workplace but large national differences and significant worries about privacy, job security, and economic equality.
June’s edition features new papers on shopper behaviour and the value of reputation, as well as global surveys on socialism, summer holiday plans and the Royal Family.
Every month across the year, our What Worries the World survey series has asked an online sample of over 18,000 citizens in 26 core countries about the biggest worries for their nation, presenting them with a list of 17 concerns ranging from crime and violence to childhood obesity.