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Is facing your mortality sparking the ‘Great Resignation’? Why we don’t want to work anymore
A combination of burnout, disengagement, ‘unpaid labour’ and more is pushing workers to make drastic career moves.
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What Worries the World: How has Covid-19 changed the outlook?
Local perspectives on our issues tracker during the pandemic.
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Global Business Influencers | APAC 2021 [Webinar recording]
Join the webinar on the days and times listed as Reece Carpenter, Audience Measurement Associate Director at Ipsos explores the latest data from the survey, at a global and regional level: APAC.
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Global Business Influencers | EUROPE 2021 [Webinar recording]
Join the webinar on the days and times listed as Reece Carpenter, Audience Measurement Associate Director at Ipsos explores the latest data from the survey, at a global and regional level: Europe.
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Global Business Influencers | US 2021 [Webinar recording]
Join the webinar on the days and times listed as Reece Carpenter, Audience Measurement Associate Director at Ipsos explores the latest data from the survey, at a global and regional level: US.
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Ipsos Update – August 2021
Featured topics include obesity, sustainability, populism, youth skills and the Tokyo Olympics. We also take a closer look at the latest research from Russia and Africa.
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Mental Wellness: The Changing Indian Attitude
Our latest India briefing paper explores the impact of Covid-19 and digitalisation on mental wellbeing.
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Workers want more flexibility from their employers after COVID
Survey of employed adults in 29 countries for the World Economic Forum finds one in four now working from home more often than before the pandemic; preference is for working remotely half of the time after it is over.
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Post-COVID vaccination behaviours and return to activities
Confidence about returning to activities varies across nine countries surveyed says a new Ipsos study conducted in partnership with the World Economic Forum.
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The tech sector always bets that product quality will override privacy concerns
Probably the most common criticism levelled at the tech sector is the one about privacy – the sense that the tech sector, or government enabled by the tech sector, are collecting far more data on individuals than they should, and that the data is then being sold or used for unclear purposes. While the tech sector sticks closely to its cherished, and well-proven, ideology that positive user experience nearly always mitigates these concerns in practice, it is also true that the concerns of pro-privacy groups within society, and government, are getting louder and more prominent.