Strategy3


About Us

Strategy3, Ipsos’ in-house consultancy: bridging multi-source insights and business strategy.

Careers at Ipsos Strategy3

Are you ready to realise your potential and help us grow ours? At Ipsos Strategy3, we're always looking for passionate individuals who are eager to make an impact.

Consumer/Customer Strategy

Deepen your market heartbeat with Strategy3's Consumer and Customer Practice, where we decode customer drivers and barriers, mapping their shopping journey and needs.
Covid-19 Publication

A year into social distancing: Will SEA see permanent shifts in consumption patterns?

Over the past few months, the promising results of several vaccines and the accelerated approvals and roll-outs given to them have injected some much-needed optimism for the year ahead. Finally, a return to pre-2020 social living appears to be on the horizon.
Online Shopping Publication

2020 was a big year for online sales - But at what cost?

Something is missing from the online buying experience. Here's what brick-and-mortar stores can learn from unhappy shoppers.
Automotive Publication

China’s tech driven intelligent connected vehicles for the next decade

New Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) such as Artificial Intelligence (AI), connectivity solutions, 5G and cloud services have been gradually transforming traditional mechanical automobiles into intelligent connected terminals, giving rise to the notion of Intelligent Connected Vehicles (ICV).
Automotive Publication

Avoiding a road to nowhere

The push for electric vehicles and their impact on environmental pollution and slave & child labour.
Consumption Publication

Passenger vehicle and motorcycle lubricant market in Indonesia

Ipsos predicts that passenger vehicle sales in Indonesia will surpass 1 million units by 2020, facilitating the country's dream of overtaking Thailand to become that No. 1 automotive hub in ASEAN.
Strategy3 Publication

Natural gas in Indonesia

While many of the world's industrialised nations have largely moved beyond oil and coal-based energy sources for their manufacturing industries, Indonesia continues to rely on these highly polluting and sometimes economically volatile energy sources to a great extent.