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It’s already holiday shopping time for the early birds
About one in five Americans have already started (or will by the time you read this) their holiday shopping, according to new data from the Ipsos Consumer Tracker
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It’s not just higher prices driving increased grocery spend
Americans are spending more on groceries since the start of the year, and most (74%) say it's because of inflation – but 25% also say it's because they're dining out less and cooking at home more, according to the Ipsos Consumer Tracker
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September 2024: Consumer confidence largely up Latin American countries
Ipsos’ Global Consumer Confidence Index (based on all 29 countries surveyed) currently reads at 49.1, up an insignificant 0.4 point since August.
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Rare Diseases: A Diagnostic Odyssey
Unravelling the Complexities of Rare Diseases: A Market Research Perspective
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United In Individuality: Insights to Activate
Americans are overwhelmed. But then again, so are most global citizens, including a majority in 44 out of 50 markets around the world.
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New report from Ipsos ranks winners in the Retail Petroleum and Convenience Store sector — and how competitors can get ahead
Ipsos’ newest Petro-Convenience Experience Excellence Competitive Benchmark Report identifies the perks and pain points that make or break the forecourt through backcourt customer journey
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Fast-track decisions with confidence and consensus in one day with Ipsos Labs
How can I make high-impact innovation and creative decisions and align all my stakeholders quickly to achieve better success?
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Conversations with AI Part V: Is there depth and empathy with AI twins?
How do synthetic respondents fall short of capturing the human experience? In this paper, we share the results of a research study conducted to test the capabilities of AI twins.
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What online communities reveal about who consumers trust
As headlines spill over into newsfeeds and group chats, Americans are embracing new attitudes about fact-checking. Ipsos’ Kristyna Kanzler explains why that matters for platforms and brands — and how research can help.
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Have shortages conditioned us to pay more for groceries?
Americans are generally against paying surge pricing, according to the Ipsos Consumer Tracker – but there are a few areas where people are more willing to pay. Among the most interesting: One in five people say they would pay an additional fee for groceries or food items that are facing shortages.