Search
-
Britain's top business journalists feel the economic tide is turning
For the first time since the financial crisis, our Business and Financial Journalist survey shows that over half of Britain’s top journalists say they expect the economy to improve over the next twelve months.
-
Uniting the City States of Radio
Radio expert Andy Haylett from Ipsos MediaCT presents the highlights from the latest RAJAR release.
-
Green shoots? Britain out of the relegation zone
The latest Ipsos Consumer Confidence Index finds British consumers feeling a little better about the state of the economy than they did 12 months ago.
-
4 in 10 Britons think the Internet is a threat to knowledge
As part of a major new exhibition about the future of manufacturing, the Design Museum has carried out a survey with Ipsos which reveals that 6%, or one in 17 people in the UK, have an interest in owning a 3D printer.
-
Britain in the "relegation zone"
At the end of a week which has seen some slightly better news about the British economy, the latest Ipsos Consumer Confidence Index, released today, underlines just how much ground the country has to make up.
-
Ipsos unveils the top ten Influential Brands in the UK
Ipsos is proud to announce the results of the first annual Influential Brands study at the Soho Hotel, London.
-
The housing market: what the public thinks
The Financial Statement blog: Ben Marshall writes up findings from our latest housing market confidence survey for the Halifax Building Society.
-
The economic mid-winter?
After a week which saw the IMF expressing concern about the state of the UK economy, a new global poll released today by Ipsos finds British consumers in gloomy mood.
-
Is good digital advertising a fragment of your imagination?
The main driver of ad effectiveness is creative quality, yet digital media planners spend much of their time optimising based on ad sizes, websites and frequency. How can we help advertisers best leverage the fastest growing medium?
-
We think more than behavioural economists think we think
We think more than behavioural economists think we think, says Oliver Sweet, head of Ethnography. Ipsos.