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Majority of Democrats, Americans overall want Biden to step aside
ABC News/Ipsos poll: More Democrats would be satisfied with Vice President Harris as the nominee compared to President Biden
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Consumer confidence nudges up
Below are five charts on where Americans stand on the economy, who’s still hurting, and how this may affect the presidential race
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Ipsos launches Creative|Spark AI, an ad testing solution generating actionable insights within minutes
Creative|Spark AI leverages the combined power of human intelligence and artificial intelligence to boost creative effectiveness.
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[WEBINAR] What the Future: Leisure
Consumers have more options for leisure than ever before thanks to digital technology and new work models. But Ipsos research shows they also feel time-pressed, and how they afford and spend their leisure time hardly feels like a break.
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The race for the presidency remains unchanged in the wake of the assassination attempt on Trump
However, Reuters/Ipsos polling fielded after the assassination attempt and GOP Vice President announcement shows most Americans are concerned about political violence
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Here's why younger shoppers still hit the mall
New data from the Ipsos Consumer Tracker indicates that it’s older Americans, not younger ones, who have dropped the mall completely. Read on to hear why — in Gen Z's own words.
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The ABCs of ESG: Insights to Activate
Consumers are about ESG, despite the noise. Here’s why, and what you should do.
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Perceived lack of benefits is the biggest barrier to generative AI adoption
One in three people (33%) say they don't think they have any need for AI tools, and another 19% say they don't see the benefit of using them, according to the Ipsos Consumer Tracker.
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Most Americans tip, and think they tip enough
One in four Americans believe they tip too much, while seven in ten believe they tip the right amount, according to the Ipsos Consumer Tracker.
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Familiarity with the 988 Suicide & Crisis Lifeline remains low at two-year mark
The latest NAMI/Ipsos poll finds that a bare majority of Americans say they don’t know when a situation is serious enough to contact the Lifeline