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Americans say 2023 was a good year, and think 2024 will be even better
Americans think 2023 was better than the three years before, according to the Ipsos Consumer Tracker
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Here's what the 2023 word of the year, 'authentic,' means for brands
More than half of consumers say an authentic brand is honest, while only one in four say an authentic brand is committed to quality goods and services, according to the Ipsos Consumer Tracker
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Some of Americans' concerns about AI are waning
Americans are growing more likely to say that AI has more benefits than drawbacks, according to the Ipsos Consumer Tracker
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Shopping continues to bounce back to pre-pandemic levels
Fewer people say they have experienced shipping delays during holiday shopping, compared to 2021, according to data from the Ipsos Consumer Tracker
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Here’s what holiday shoppers actually did in 2023
Black Friday still reigns, and big boxes dominate. Here’s what retailers need to know to prep for the holidays next year.
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Teens aren’t what you think anymore. Here’s why you need a new playbook
Today’s teens are coming of age in a fast-changing world, and they’re doing it differently than teens of the past. What the Future editor Matt Carmichael discusses the life stage shifts, anxieties and hopes that will define the teenage years in the decades to come.
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People still feeling the pinch, fed up with ‘shrinkflation’ as 2023 wraps up
The latest wave of the Ipsos Global Inflation Monitor finds people across 33 countries will have more money to spend in the next year as red-hot prices cool off slightly in many places; and almost half of the global public are seeing red over products getting smaller but prices staying the same.
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The Role of YouTube Connected TV in Offline Action & Behavior Change
YouTube commissioned research with Ipsos to understand if ads on YouTube CTV vs. linear TV impact viewers differently, specifically in driving offline actions and behavior changes. Here are the results.
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Making a list, and price checking it twice: Most Americans (74%) buying fewer gifts in response to inflation and rising cost of living
Economic snowstorms are burying a majority of Americans (55%), who plan to dig out of the situation by using debt to fund holiday gift purchases.