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The Next Big Trend in Taiwan: Stay-at-Home Economy
Internet technologies have not only formed the online shopping behaviour, but also changed the way people do their work. “Working at home” is a good example of the impact of the Internet.
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"African Women" Ipsos Study: Women as Key Drivers of the African Economy
On the heels of African Youth in 2016, Ipsos is publishing an unprecedented study of African women* to mark the second year of its annual Africa conference at the Dapper Museum. Conducted in seven African countries, the study paints a picture of motivated, independent and optimistic women who are a driving force in this rapidly developing continent.
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[EVENT] Frontiers of Service Conference
Join Ipsos’ Trish Dorsey on June 23 @11am (Room GABELLI 324) for reasons why you need to Ditch The Spec Sheet.
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2017 US Politics - Trump Receives Stronger Marks on his Handling of the US Economy (May 10)
In the latest Reuters/Ipsos Core Political, concerns over healthcare remain high.
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2017 US Politics - President Trump’s Approval Rating Has Increased Slightly (May 3)
In the latest Reuters/Ipsos Core Political, concern over healthcare grows.
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Ipsos Update - May 2017
Welcome to the May edition of Ipsos Update, our monthly round-up of Ipsos’ research and thinking from around the world.
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[EVENT] ASCO Annual Meeting
On June 2, join Ipsos Healthcare’s Marco Dibonaventura who will be presenting at this year’s conference dedicated to the brightest minds of oncology.
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2017 US Politics - Americans Remain Pessimistic About the Current State of the Country (April 26)
Over half of Americans (55%) still believe the country is on the wrong track, with less than a third believing we are heading in the right direction (29%).
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Flair Italy 2017 - The Bespoke Reality
Italy internalises turbulence, Italy’s families are in an increasingly precarious situation, Italy is dominated by a cautious attitude... Discover the 10 points of Flair Italy 2017.
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Audiences or Programmes?
In a recent White Paper, programmatic demand-side platform provider, TubeMogul, referred to ‘the unstoppable shift to audience-based buying’ in the US television market, arguing that inefficiencies in the way TV advertising has traditionally been bought and sold, as well as advances in the way people receive their TV content, will lead inevitably to a time when more and more of it will be traded programmatically.