In this paper, we outline ten predictions for the future of audience measurement. It is an important area of expertise for Ipsos. We measure the audiences to media content in more than 70 countries. This includes those accessing this content via both traditional and digital means.
Ipsos Healthcare has launched its Nonalcoholic Steatohepatitis (NASH) Therapy Monitor in the US and EU5 initially – France, Germany, Italy, Spain, and UK – with other markets available on demand.
Using the analysis and synthesis of social data to enhance and complement our primary research. We live in a digital world where mobile technology allows us to spend more and more time on social media.
Africa has the world’s youngest population. Young people account for 60% of the continent’s population. More specifically, there are 220 million young people aged 15-24 in Africa. According to a UNESCO forecast, there will be 350 million in 2030.
Over the past few years, we have seen an increased proliferation of mobile across the world. Not only have we seen the number of mobile users grow worldwide, but we’ve witnessed increased engagement of consumers with their mobile devices for a variety of everyday activities, whether it’s watching videos, shopping and making purchases, or simply accessing the internet. We are now past the mobile tipping point, with mobile overtaking fixed internet access in many markets, across developed and developing economies. Consumer interactions with brands are, more than ever before, fragmented and multi-layered. Consumers are leading busy lives, and multi-task routinely in their day. Consequently, many of the planned brand exposures are missed and recall relevancy is eroding faster than expected.
Consumers have never had as many ways to engage with music as they have today. Yet with many services being based on free, ad-supported models it is fair to argue that the value of music itself as a commodity is rapidly declining in the eye of the consumers.
Social Intelligence delivers insights that drive strategic decisions and performance, from consumer expression and behaviours found in social media, search and other online data.
Early in June, Ipsos presented at a seminar in Paris looking ahead to the forthcoming elections in the United States and France. The event, hosted by the US Embassy, saw Brice Teinturier (Ipsos Public Affairs, France) and Clifford Young (Ipsos Public Affairs, USA) describe the prevailing mood in their respective countries and what this means for the political scene.
A week after the Democratic National Convention – with a good amount of drama in the interim days – finds Clinton leading Trump by four points among Likely Voters, a one-point drop from last week. We’re likely to see Clinton’s “convention bump” recede a bit in the coming days, although the internal wrangling going on within the Republican Party could mean her bump sustains longer than normal.
The UK’s vote to leave the EU was a shock across the continent and beyond, and this survey shows it’s still something that many are coming to terms with. But there is not wholesale panic – in fact fears of a “domino effect” seem to be receding.
As the lines between media, advertising and technology blur, marketers, content creators and consumers are changing. “The people born in 1990s are now buying cars!”