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Shopping
What the Future: Shopping explores the forces that are changing how Americans spend and save, and how that will reverberate across industries.
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How shopping will be omnichannel, omnipresent and omniscient
What the Future editor Matt Carmichael looks at the forces that are redefining retail – from social shopping to immersive stores – and what they mean for mom-and-pop shops, e-commerce, and everything in between.
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Why all the world’s (going to be) a store
From one-click checkouts to interactive ads, Publicis Groupe’s Angel Bellon thinks innovation will lead to new ways to shop. Here’s how inclusion and international influences could fit into that picture.
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Ways digital payment options will keep Americans spending
From cashless kiosks to real-time payments, money is changing hands in new ways. Payments Dive’s Lynne Marek explains just how commerce is changing.
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Future Jobs to Be Done
People don’t spend for spending’s sake – they shop to meet specific needs. Ipsos Strategy3’s Sophie Washington explains how those needs could change in the years to come.
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[WEBINAR] What the Future: Shopping
Social shifts, new technologies and changing values are revolutionizing the ways people shop. How will the brands, independent retailers, and superstores that sell to them earn their business?
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How younger Americans use credit cards to make ends meet
What the Ipsos Consumer Tracker reveals about how credit utilization varies by generation — and how it fits into the broader economic picture
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Store brands hold slight edge over name brands
A new Ipsos poll also finds that younger Americans are more likely to use food delivery apps compared to older Americans
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Appointment of Mary Ann Packo as CEO of Ipsos in North America
Ipsos is pleased to announce the appointment of Mary Ann Packo, effective today, as CEO of Ipsos in North America.
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Most Americans say the economy and inflation are the most important issues determining who they will support for president in November
New ABC News/Ipsos polling finds that President Biden’s approval remains low