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Revolution@Work: Fears and Expectations
Ipsos research on the future of work provides unique insights on employee feelings about transformations in the workplace. An international survey was conducted for the 2017 Revolution@Work event, recently organised in Paris.
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The Curse of Cosy
The seemingly harmless Danish 'hygge' trend is now damaging our health, such is the way in which the British have interpreted it. It has been mistranslated as the 'easy life' and is often used as a justification for being a bit lazy.
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Flair Brazil 2018 - The Mask Slipped! Time for Truth
For many Brazilians, it’s the “Time for Truth”. Years of political scandals, government corruption and the omnipresent “false news” have become too numerous - people now trust only themselves to discover reality. Brands, advertising, companies are not spared by this new age of suspicion.
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[WEBINAR] DUEL: Understanding Appeal and Passion
Ipsos is very excited to introduce DUEL — the next generation of early screening for claims, pack images, and logos.
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[EVENT] Connected Health: The Physcian's View
December 1 - #IpsosSpeaks: Ipsos Healthcare Digital Doctor Report 2017
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Global Infrastructure Index - September 2017
According to the Ipsos 2017 Global Infrastructure Index, a third (37%) are satisfied with infrastructure in their country but, regionally, this varies from 35% in LATAM countries to 43% in the APAC region, reaching a high of 65% in Saudi Arabia, four times the low of 15% in Italy.
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Flair Argentina 2017 - The Crisis in the DNA
If you were to Google Argentina, you would find more than 1 billion results: the major part is about Tango, Carlos Gardel, football, amazing landscapes populated by gauchos, food, asado, beef and wine production, politics and shows with the Peron couple, popularised by Madonna...
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Taking Responsibility - Ipsos in Korea Participates in Enjoyable, Cultural Activity
The CSR programme’s main focuses is education and the well-being of children.
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The Rising Tide of Next Generation Cancer Treatments
Despite the answers we are still seeking, huge progress has been made since the initial discovery of anti-cancer drugs – and all in a relatively short space of time. Indeed, the pace of advancement has never been more rapid than it is today.