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Four things to consider when starting a social intelligence program
Social intelligence requires more than just software. Here’s what you can expect.
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Smarten Up! Neuromarketing Is Getting More Intelligent
Understanding what makes people tick has always been at the center of marketing. For decades, Ipsos and others have left no stone unturned in the quest to fathom consumer behavior and take marketing to a new and better level. Yet, as every marketing professional knows, data from surveys, focus groups, point of sale, credit cards, click behavior, and even beacons can only go so far.
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Mobile
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.
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Web Listening
Social Intelligence delivers insights that drive strategic decisions and performance, from consumer expression and behaviours found in social media, search and other online data.
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Workshops
Activation workshops are interactive sessions which help you turn insights into action and connect to business outcomes.
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Connected car: A new ecosystem
Today, the cars produced by the major automotive original equipment manufacturers are built with automotive embedded systems. Soon they will become communicating objects. Ipsos expects that there will be 69 million connected cars on the road by 2020, equivalent to 75% of all cars shipped globally.
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Revealing Implicit Brand Drivers
Research has shown now that implicit perceptions can be very different from explicit perceptions and that both types can have an impact on behavior.