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Listen to People, Planet, Prosperity, Ipsos' ESG Podcast
This series examines how our partners across various different sectors are addressing the environmental, social, and governance challenges of the 2020s, what they’re doing to ensure that their businesses remain sustainable, and how they’re helping the world to successfully adapt. Each episode features a different specialist from with our business in conversation with a client, partner, or external expert to unpick a specific issue within or about ESG.
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Politicians are the least trusted profession, while doctors and scientists are seen as the most trustworthy
Running since 2018, the Ipsos Global Trustworthiness Index tracks how trustworthy or untrustworthy people see different professions.
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Digital extremism: How algorithms feed the politics polarisation
In the 2018 presidential election, we saw political polarisation reach unprecedented heights in Brazil. We witnessed clashes in the streets, within families, in WhatsApp groups and, above all, on social media.
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Dare to be a TikTok MISFIT: How KitKat shaped a cultural moment and championed Brand Success
In early 2023, KitKat Japan unveiled its noteworthy KitKat YOKUBARI DOUBLE ad on TikTok. Masterfully adhering to social media codes while injecting a burst of creative brilliance resulted in an authentic Misfits story.
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Creative Excellence helps advertisers to bring back the magic by using research to inspire and empower creativity
Creative Excellence brings back the magic.
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Building reputation in 2023: the link between corporate reputation and business efficiency
Drawing on data from our latest 24-country Global Reputation Monitor, this paper explores the relationship between a good reputation and better business efficiency.
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Ipsos teams up with UN Women-convened Unstereotype Alliance to fight harmful stereotypes
The Unstereotype Alliance campaign is the result of an Ipsos survey carried out across Brazil, South Africa, Turkey, the US and the UK revealing that close to three-quarters (73%) of people will witness stereotyping, yet under a third (30%) will actively challenge it.