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Pictures speak louder than words: Towards a new understanding of brand choice
Using metaphor elicitation to gain a truer consumer-centric measure of influence.
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Misinformation the real winner of the first U.S. presidential debate
The debate does not appear to have fundamentally altered the trajectory of the race, though Team Trump may be winning the information war if viral articles on Twitter are any indication.
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Ipsos Update - October 2020
Our new brand growth story, the future of money, fractures in French society and a special on the US election all feature in our latest monthly round-up of research and thinking from Ipsos around the world.
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KEYS - Adaptive Brands [Webinar recording]
We will be looking at how brands are adapting in the current environment – and considering the building blocks for success.
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European enterprise survey on the use of technologies based on artificial intelligence
First EU-wide survey on the uptake of artificial intelligence (AI) technologies carried out by Ipsos for the European Commission.
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The post-purpose role for brands
Brands have a role to play in our society and culture, beyond economic prosperity and maximising shareholder value.
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Disrupting System 1 thinking: Better science for smarter marketing
Since the publication of Daniel Kahneman’s Thinking Fast and Slow in 2012, there has been an explosion of interest in System 1 versus System 2 thinking (aka Dual Process Theory) and its applications to marketing in particular. But what if we have it wrong? Are we using the latest and best science appropriately?
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French fractures: faced with the crises hitting the country, the need for protection is stronger than ever
The 8th wave of the annual "French Fractures" barometer, carried out by Ipsos/Sopra Steria for Le Monde, the CEVIPOF, the Jean-Jaurès Foundation and the Institut Montaigne, highlights the major dividing lines that cut across French society.
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Around the world, people yearn for significant change rather than a return to a “pre-COVID normal”
A new global Ipsos survey for the World Economic Forum unveils a profound and widespread desire for change rather than a return to how things were before the COVID-19 pandemic.