The Ipsos Almanac
Ipsos Update - April 2019
This month’s edition features Ipsos research and thinking on technology and healthcare, nationality and inclusivity, Indian cuisine, virtual reality, text analytics and more.
Fortnite: Shaking the Media and Entertainment Industry
To understand the success and cultural relevancy of Fortnite, we worked with the ISFE (Interactive Software Federation of Europe) to understand Fortnite's cyclical relationship with content.
Connected Health: A roadmap to success
Connected Health is moving into the mainstream – how will this change the traditional structure of healthcare?
Ipsos Research Highlights - March 2019
Welcome to Highlights where we see Theresa May still struggling with Britain's withdrawal from the European Union, concern about crime increases and are we becoming more environmentally conscious?
79% of Voice Activated Speaker Owners Have an Amazon Echo
Ipsos' Tech Tracker is a quarterly, GB nationally representative research survey which measures the emerging trends and developments in technology.
High hopes: Tips for ensuring successful text analytics
Text analytics is now an established component of many market research programmes. However, as its popularity has increased, so have expectations of what it can deliver. Here, Fiona Moss provides five ground rules to follow to ensure more success in using text analytics tools.
Virtual Reality: Hype or the Future?
Virtual Reality (VR) technology has been around for at least a decade and you could say it’s clearly gone from sci-fi to sci-fact. However, it’s still seen as a new technology and has not hit mass adoption; so what has gone wrong?
National evaluation of the Troubled Families Programme 2015 to 2020
The latest in a series of reports outlining findings from the evaluation of the Troubled Families Programme 2015 to 2020.
What do British business leaders really think of Brexit?
The Captains of Industry study has run for 38 consecutive years, yet there has rarely been an issue as thorny as Brexit going on in the background. So, what do the most successful business leaders in the country really think is going to happen?
GP Patient Survey: Experiences of young patients (aged 16 – 24 years old)
Heather Ashford looks at data from the 2018 GP Patient Survey (GPPS) and what the survey tells us about the experiences of young patients aged 16 – 24 years old.