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Ipsos Update - November 2019
Welcome to November’s edition of Ipsos Update – our round-up of the latest research and thinking from Ipsos teams around the world. Featured topics include mental health, Black Friday, brand-building, climate change and packaging trends in China.
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Ipsos Update - October 2019
This month's edition of Ipsos Update features recent Ipsos research and thinking on trust, customer experience, populism and nativism and our new edition of Flair South Korea.
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What worries you the most? Unemployment, but corruption, inequality closing the gap
In the latest edition of Global Advisor’s What Worries the World, researchers tracked the issues people worried about the most in 28 countries, comparing the results over the nine-year period since the survey began in 2010.
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Are consumers really engaging with corporate sustainability issues?
Consumers hold companies and governments responsible for sustainability. Discover just how much this is true.
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The Reputation Council Report
Established in 2009, the Ipsos Reputation Council brings together senior communicators from some of the most respected corporations in the world.
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Question: Are resident incentives the key to solving affordable housing?
Housing trends among Millennials are complicated beasts, and predicting where they are headed is tricky. This generation is beset by student debt, and many Millennials came of age during a weak job market and got spooked by a housing crash
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Question: Can incentives for individuals jumpstart our stagnant mobility rate?
If you ask mayors throughout the U.S. what their biggest challenges are, they will quickly list talent attraction as one of their chief concerns.
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Question: Will today’s high-end urban amenities become tomorrow’s status quo?
Nearly 20 years ago, urban theorist Richard Florida identified a group of highly-skilled workers whose outsized contributions were driving economic change and development in cities around the globe.
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Unhealthy Foods: Is Intervention the Answer?
Referencing a 22 country study examining opinions and perceptions towards different types and levels of government intervention on unhealthy foods, our findings show that American opinions vary greatly depending on the degree of intervention.
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Saving With Lower Gas Prices?
According to a recent Ipsos Public Affairs eNations omnibus study conducted in January 2015, one-third (36%) of Americans felt they were able to spend more money for the holidays because gas prices were so low.