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Ipsos Research Highlights - September 2018
Ipsos's Research Highlights for September 2018 includes a continued lack of confidence in party leaders, our reactions to fake news, the launch of Perils of Perception and attitudes towards the proposed opt-out system for organ donation.
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Bringing the public along on the health tech revolution
Kate Duxbury reflects on the initial code of conduct for data driven health and care technology.
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Super-clear? Where next for regulation of the food and drink industry
Legislation related to transparency generally, and obesity and healthy eating in particular is looking increasingly likely to be heading this way. How can companies handle this in terms of their communications?
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Has the Digital Banking revolution finally started? The FinTech landscape in 2018
Spurred on by Open Banking, advocates of FinTech are forecasting a revolution in the financial services sector. But with the change seemingly slow to happen, Tom Erasmus asks will the latest innovations finally overcome consumer inertia?
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Getting closer to SMEs: a six-step relationship builder for banks
Research Director Georgiana Brown has a six-step guide for banks on how they can build better relationships with SMEs. This article originally appeared in Global Banking and Finance Review Magazine.
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How to avoid an #epicfail
For brands to better leverage the increasingly connected world of social media, we’ve created a safe environment to test out ideas, concepts and campaigns. Welcome to Ipsos Digital Communities.
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Show me the money
In a highly private topic matter tied up in the desire to project a certain self externally, untangling the complexities of financial management from the cultural eco-system it sits within has never been so important. Using two ethnographic case studies, we reveal the differences between what we say we do, and what we actually do.
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Open Banking – the great data giveaway?
Open Banking may deliver the envisaged sea change in the financial services sector, but trust will be a big factor in determining who will take advantage of the opportunities. Here, Paul Stamper explains why traditional banks might be best placed, and what the new players can do to compete with them.
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New innovation finance products: qualitative research
New qualitative research commissioned by BEIS to understand the appetite for different features of publicly financed debt products.
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The Curse of Cosy
The seemingly harmless Danish 'hygge' trend is now damaging our health, such is the way in which the British have interpreted it. It has been mistranslated as the 'easy life' and is often used as a justification for being a bit lazy.