Search
-
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.
-
Bridging the Brand Experience Gap
How to align brand promise and customer experience for business success
-
Using machine intelligence to spot unmet customer needs
Machine intelligence does a great job helping us navigate between complex contextual layers – something that is not easily available.
-
Recovery, recurrence, and research: How social research is informing COVID strategies at every stage of the pandemic [Webinar]
Join Ipsos' Public Affairs leaders from around the globe as we examine how social research has informed strategies through every stage of the COVID-19 pandemic.
-
KEYS - Making a difference? Brands in real lives [Webinar recording]
This Ipsos webinar series is dedicated to helping our clients better understand the dynamics of today as they prepare for tomorrow.
-
Women in Advertising
The power of positive representation for a better society and a more successful brand
-
Service with a smile? Latin America edition
Delivering customer experience in the face of mask wearing
-
Amid the uncertainty of the pandemic, the S of ESG is coming under greater scrutiny
As ESG has surged up the consumer agenda, new Ipsos data shows that improving society is identified as the top priority for multinationals among consumers across the globe – perhaps not surprising given the social implications of the pandemic. While fundamental issues such as safe working conditions are seen as most important here, each company should carefully consider how to adapt its operations to improve sustainable business practice. Companies should continue to pursue actions on all three pillars of ESG though. Not just because E and G remain critical in the public’s eyes, but also as it – as we should all know now – makes good business sense to do so.
-
World Youth Skills Day 2021: Worse mental health and wellbeing are seen as long-lasting outcomes of the COVID-19 pandemic for children and young people
On average, almost four in ten across 29 countries (a global country average of 37%), think worse mental health and wellbeing among children and young people will be a long-lasting outcome of the pandemic, according to new global study from Ipsos.