2021 Proof Strategies CanTrust Index: Trust and the Pandemic - May UpdateProof
Proof Strategies released our robust CanTrust Index study in February 2021 and went back into the field in early May 2021 to survey Canadians on their trust levels in elected leaders, scientists, doctors, journalists and vaccines. The distinct trust story in Canada continues as we see a 10-point increase in trust in vaccines in only four months. The increase has happened in every region. Unlike the United States, vaccine trust spans supporters of all political parties. Our research shows that trust in doctors, scientists and medical officers also remains high. Right now, Canadians have trust and want vaccines!
The Proof Strategies CanTrust Index is a leading source of research and understanding of trust in Canada. Read the 2021 report at http://CanTrustIndex.ca
The 14th annual Trust Barometer is the largest study of its kind, and explores rising and falling levels of trust across twenty-seven markets, and 33,000 people; considering different industry sectors; as well as the impact and perception of government, business, media and society.
www.cantrustindex.ca
The Proof Strategies CanTrust Index, now in its 7th year, is a leading source of research and insights on trust in Canada. We report a distinctly Canadian story. Societies, democracies and economies cannot function without trust.
Our study uses a 7-point scale with 7 being the highest trust and 1 being the lowest. Respondents choosing 7, 6 or 5 result in the percentages of trust used in this report.
The 2022 Proof Strategies CanTrust Index is released within one month of completion to ensure the most current data and analysis, unlike older studies. Our research tells the unique story of trust among Canadians, and who they believe is trustworthy in this world of ever-increasing misinformation, conspiracy theories and keyboard warriors.
Trust in Canada’s Leaders and Democratic InstitutionsProof
With the dust settling following a fraught federal election campaign, new survey data shows worrying trends in Canadians’ trust in the electoral system, party leaders and more.
Since 2016, Proof Inc. has studied trust in Canada through an annual survey of Canadian adults. On the heels of the Fall federal election, Proof went back into the field to gather a fresh, updated perspective on Canadians’ trust in party leaders, our democracy and the country’s key government institutions.
CanTrust Index: COVID-19 Impact Update September 2020Proof
Now in its 5th year, Proof’s CanTrust Index is a leading source of research and understanding of trust in Canada. For 2020, we conducted our robust study in our usual January time period (as COVID-19 began to sweep around the world), and a smaller follow-up survey in early May after Canada had entered a lock-down. Our data shows that Canada’s trust story is in many ways stable, and during this pandemic, both doctors and scientists are rising into stratospheric trust levels. Our research also finds trust is particularly strong in essential services such as local hospitals, banks and grocery stores. Worryingly, our CEOs and senior leaders are losing trust and need to do better. Recovery plans should include building trust.
Now in its 6th year, the Proof Strategies* CanTrust Index is a leading source of research and insights on trust in Canada. We report a distinctly Canadian story.
The 2021 Proof Strategies CanTrust Index was in field in January of this year and tells the unique story of trust among Canadians, and who they believe is trustworthy in this world of ever-increasing misinformation, conspiracy theories and keyboard warriors. During the enormous uncertainty of this pandemic, the circumstances can be fuel for mistrust or an opportunity to build trust.
2021 Proof Strategies CanTrust Index: Trust and the Pandemic - May UpdateProof
Proof Strategies released our robust CanTrust Index study in February 2021 and went back into the field in early May 2021 to survey Canadians on their trust levels in elected leaders, scientists, doctors, journalists and vaccines. The distinct trust story in Canada continues as we see a 10-point increase in trust in vaccines in only four months. The increase has happened in every region. Unlike the United States, vaccine trust spans supporters of all political parties. Our research shows that trust in doctors, scientists and medical officers also remains high. Right now, Canadians have trust and want vaccines!
The Proof Strategies CanTrust Index is a leading source of research and understanding of trust in Canada. Read the 2021 report at http://CanTrustIndex.ca
The 14th annual Trust Barometer is the largest study of its kind, and explores rising and falling levels of trust across twenty-seven markets, and 33,000 people; considering different industry sectors; as well as the impact and perception of government, business, media and society.
www.cantrustindex.ca
The Proof Strategies CanTrust Index, now in its 7th year, is a leading source of research and insights on trust in Canada. We report a distinctly Canadian story. Societies, democracies and economies cannot function without trust.
Our study uses a 7-point scale with 7 being the highest trust and 1 being the lowest. Respondents choosing 7, 6 or 5 result in the percentages of trust used in this report.
The 2022 Proof Strategies CanTrust Index is released within one month of completion to ensure the most current data and analysis, unlike older studies. Our research tells the unique story of trust among Canadians, and who they believe is trustworthy in this world of ever-increasing misinformation, conspiracy theories and keyboard warriors.
Trust in Canada’s Leaders and Democratic InstitutionsProof
With the dust settling following a fraught federal election campaign, new survey data shows worrying trends in Canadians’ trust in the electoral system, party leaders and more.
Since 2016, Proof Inc. has studied trust in Canada through an annual survey of Canadian adults. On the heels of the Fall federal election, Proof went back into the field to gather a fresh, updated perspective on Canadians’ trust in party leaders, our democracy and the country’s key government institutions.
CanTrust Index: COVID-19 Impact Update September 2020Proof
Now in its 5th year, Proof’s CanTrust Index is a leading source of research and understanding of trust in Canada. For 2020, we conducted our robust study in our usual January time period (as COVID-19 began to sweep around the world), and a smaller follow-up survey in early May after Canada had entered a lock-down. Our data shows that Canada’s trust story is in many ways stable, and during this pandemic, both doctors and scientists are rising into stratospheric trust levels. Our research also finds trust is particularly strong in essential services such as local hospitals, banks and grocery stores. Worryingly, our CEOs and senior leaders are losing trust and need to do better. Recovery plans should include building trust.
Now in its 6th year, the Proof Strategies* CanTrust Index is a leading source of research and insights on trust in Canada. We report a distinctly Canadian story.
The 2021 Proof Strategies CanTrust Index was in field in January of this year and tells the unique story of trust among Canadians, and who they believe is trustworthy in this world of ever-increasing misinformation, conspiracy theories and keyboard warriors. During the enormous uncertainty of this pandemic, the circumstances can be fuel for mistrust or an opportunity to build trust.
Edelman Trust Barometer 2017 - UK ResultsEdelman_UK
The 2017 Edelman Trust Barometer is the firm’s 17th annual trust and credibility survey. It measures trust across a number of institutions, sectors and geographies.
2017 Edelman Trust Barometer Special Report: Institutional InvestorsEdelman_UK
The 2017 Edelman Trust Barometer Special Report: Institutional Investors, a survey of institutional investors who invest in global equities highlights emerging business risks and opportunities for companies, their boards, and management to build and maintain trust with the financial community.
The inaugural report reveals that roughly half of institutional investors think that most companies do not acknowledge the risks to their business from the current political climate, reflecting broader concerns raised in the Trust Barometer Global Report 2017.
2020 Proof CanTrust Report - January and May resultsProof
For more than 5 years, Proof Strategies has been conducting the CanTrust Index as a leading source of knowledge and understanding of trust in Canada. In 2020, we have sampled Canadians three times so far, with our robust annual survey in January and follow-up surveys in May and September. Our data shows a unique Canadian story that is different from the narrative in other countries. We find the pandemic has elevated Canadians to unprecedented heights of trust in doctors and scientists as well as a higher trust in government. Worryingly, our senior leaders in corporations and other places need to do better. In these times of turbulence and transition, organizations have to be designed for trust.
2014 Edelman Trust Barometer: Canadian FindingsEdelman
The Edelman Trust Barometer is the world’s preeminent study of trust around the world. This deck compiles both global and Canadian findings for 2014.
Learn more at http://www.edelman.ca
Edelman Trust Barometer 2018 - UK ResultsEdelman_UK
The 2018 Edelman Trust Barometer is the firm’s 18th annual trust and credibility survey. It measures trust across a number of institutions, sectors and geographies.
2017 Edelman Trust Barometer - California ResultsEdelman
For 17 years, the Edelman Trust Barometer has measured trust in institutions including business, media, NGOs and government. View the California Trust survey results.
Read the full global results at www.edelman.com/trust2017
The Proof CanTrust Index is a leading source of research and understanding of trust in Canada. Now in its 5th year, Proof's CanTrust Index is a leading source of research and understanding of trust in Canada. For 2020, we surveyed 2,500 Canadians through two studies in January as COVID-19 began to sweep around the world. Our new data shows that Canada’s trust story is in many ways stable. During this pandemic, trust is particularly strong in essential services such as local hospitals, banks and grocery stores. Worryingly, the people that lead us are losing trust. Canada’s pandemic recovery plan should include building trust. Learn more and read the 2020 report at http://CanTrustIndex.ca
Edelman Trust Barometer 2015 - UK Results Edelman_UK
The 2015 Edelman Trust Barometer is the firm’s 15th annual trust and credibility survey. The survey was powered by research firm Edelman Berland and consisted and sampled 27,000 general population respondents with an oversample of 6,000 informed publics ages 25-64 across 27 markets.
It measures trust across a number of institutions, sectors and geographies
Following George Osborne's Budget Statement announcement, Edelman's polling shows the UK general population's sentiment towards the Budget and key political parties.
The 2018 Edelman Earned Brand study reveals that nearly two-thirds (64 percent) of consumers around the world now buy on belief, a remarkable increase of 13 points since 2017. These Belief-Driven Buyers will choose, switch, avoid or boycott a brand based on where it stands on the political or social issues they care about.
The 2020 Edelman Trust Barometer is the firm’s 20th annual trust and credibility survey. It measures trust across a number of institutions, sectors and geographies.
2020 Edelman Trust Barometer Spring Update UKEdelman_UK
The 2020 Edelman Trust Barometer Spring Update reveals trust in government has reached record levels amongst Britons, rising more than any other country surveyed for a special pandemic edition of the Edelman Trust Barometer released today.
2017 Edelman Trust Barometer - Canadian ResultsEdelman
The Canadian data this year Edelman Trust Barometer uncovers some very worrying trends that we ignore at our peril. And this is true whether you hail from a business, the government or the media.
Take a look at the results of this year’s Trust Barometer in Canada.
2014 Edelman Trust Barometer: Brazil FindingsEdelman
The 2014 Edelman Trust Barometer is the firm’s 14th annual trust and credibility survey produced by research firm Edelman Berland. This edition of the survey sampled 33,000 across 27 countries. Here you will find the results focused on the Brazilian market.
Edelman Trust Barometer 2016 - UK ResultsEdelman_UK
The 2016 Edelman Trust Barometer is the firm’s 15th annual trust and credibility survey. It measures trust across a number of institutions, sectors and geographies.
The 2016 Edelman Trust Barometer surveyed more than 33,000 respondents with an oversample of 1,150 general population respondents ages 18 and over and 500 informed public respondents in the U.S. and China and 200 informed public respondents in all other countries representing 15 percent of the total population across 28 countries. All informed publics met the following criteria: ages 25-64, college-educated; household income in the top 25 percent for their age in their country; report significant media consumption and engagement in business news and public policy. The 2016 Trust Barometer UK Supplement was fielded from 11th – 13th January. The survey consists of 1,000 general online population with Informed Publics occurring naturally in the population sample. Additional boost samples of 250 low income households and 100 high net worth individuals have been included in the UK Supplement.
Edelman Trust Barometer 2017 - UK ResultsEdelman_UK
The 2017 Edelman Trust Barometer is the firm’s 17th annual trust and credibility survey. It measures trust across a number of institutions, sectors and geographies.
2017 Edelman Trust Barometer Special Report: Institutional InvestorsEdelman_UK
The 2017 Edelman Trust Barometer Special Report: Institutional Investors, a survey of institutional investors who invest in global equities highlights emerging business risks and opportunities for companies, their boards, and management to build and maintain trust with the financial community.
The inaugural report reveals that roughly half of institutional investors think that most companies do not acknowledge the risks to their business from the current political climate, reflecting broader concerns raised in the Trust Barometer Global Report 2017.
2020 Proof CanTrust Report - January and May resultsProof
For more than 5 years, Proof Strategies has been conducting the CanTrust Index as a leading source of knowledge and understanding of trust in Canada. In 2020, we have sampled Canadians three times so far, with our robust annual survey in January and follow-up surveys in May and September. Our data shows a unique Canadian story that is different from the narrative in other countries. We find the pandemic has elevated Canadians to unprecedented heights of trust in doctors and scientists as well as a higher trust in government. Worryingly, our senior leaders in corporations and other places need to do better. In these times of turbulence and transition, organizations have to be designed for trust.
2014 Edelman Trust Barometer: Canadian FindingsEdelman
The Edelman Trust Barometer is the world’s preeminent study of trust around the world. This deck compiles both global and Canadian findings for 2014.
Learn more at http://www.edelman.ca
Edelman Trust Barometer 2018 - UK ResultsEdelman_UK
The 2018 Edelman Trust Barometer is the firm’s 18th annual trust and credibility survey. It measures trust across a number of institutions, sectors and geographies.
2017 Edelman Trust Barometer - California ResultsEdelman
For 17 years, the Edelman Trust Barometer has measured trust in institutions including business, media, NGOs and government. View the California Trust survey results.
Read the full global results at www.edelman.com/trust2017
The Proof CanTrust Index is a leading source of research and understanding of trust in Canada. Now in its 5th year, Proof's CanTrust Index is a leading source of research and understanding of trust in Canada. For 2020, we surveyed 2,500 Canadians through two studies in January as COVID-19 began to sweep around the world. Our new data shows that Canada’s trust story is in many ways stable. During this pandemic, trust is particularly strong in essential services such as local hospitals, banks and grocery stores. Worryingly, the people that lead us are losing trust. Canada’s pandemic recovery plan should include building trust. Learn more and read the 2020 report at http://CanTrustIndex.ca
Edelman Trust Barometer 2015 - UK Results Edelman_UK
The 2015 Edelman Trust Barometer is the firm’s 15th annual trust and credibility survey. The survey was powered by research firm Edelman Berland and consisted and sampled 27,000 general population respondents with an oversample of 6,000 informed publics ages 25-64 across 27 markets.
It measures trust across a number of institutions, sectors and geographies
Following George Osborne's Budget Statement announcement, Edelman's polling shows the UK general population's sentiment towards the Budget and key political parties.
The 2018 Edelman Earned Brand study reveals that nearly two-thirds (64 percent) of consumers around the world now buy on belief, a remarkable increase of 13 points since 2017. These Belief-Driven Buyers will choose, switch, avoid or boycott a brand based on where it stands on the political or social issues they care about.
The 2020 Edelman Trust Barometer is the firm’s 20th annual trust and credibility survey. It measures trust across a number of institutions, sectors and geographies.
2020 Edelman Trust Barometer Spring Update UKEdelman_UK
The 2020 Edelman Trust Barometer Spring Update reveals trust in government has reached record levels amongst Britons, rising more than any other country surveyed for a special pandemic edition of the Edelman Trust Barometer released today.
2017 Edelman Trust Barometer - Canadian ResultsEdelman
The Canadian data this year Edelman Trust Barometer uncovers some very worrying trends that we ignore at our peril. And this is true whether you hail from a business, the government or the media.
Take a look at the results of this year’s Trust Barometer in Canada.
2014 Edelman Trust Barometer: Brazil FindingsEdelman
The 2014 Edelman Trust Barometer is the firm’s 14th annual trust and credibility survey produced by research firm Edelman Berland. This edition of the survey sampled 33,000 across 27 countries. Here you will find the results focused on the Brazilian market.
Edelman Trust Barometer 2016 - UK ResultsEdelman_UK
The 2016 Edelman Trust Barometer is the firm’s 15th annual trust and credibility survey. It measures trust across a number of institutions, sectors and geographies.
The 2016 Edelman Trust Barometer surveyed more than 33,000 respondents with an oversample of 1,150 general population respondents ages 18 and over and 500 informed public respondents in the U.S. and China and 200 informed public respondents in all other countries representing 15 percent of the total population across 28 countries. All informed publics met the following criteria: ages 25-64, college-educated; household income in the top 25 percent for their age in their country; report significant media consumption and engagement in business news and public policy. The 2016 Trust Barometer UK Supplement was fielded from 11th – 13th January. The survey consists of 1,000 general online population with Informed Publics occurring naturally in the population sample. Additional boost samples of 250 low income households and 100 high net worth individuals have been included in the UK Supplement.
The Proof Strategies CanTrust Index, now in its 8th year, is a leading source of research and insights on trust in Canada. We report a distinctly Canadian story. Societies, democracies and economies cannot function without trust.
Our study uses a 7-point scale with 7 being the highest trust and 1 being the lowest. Respondents choosing 7, 6 or 5 result in the percentages of trust used in this report.
The Proof Strategies CanTrust Index is released within one month of completion to ensure the most current data and analysis, unlike older studies. Our research tells the unique story of trust among Canadians, and who they believe is trustworthy in this world of ever-increasing misinformation, conspiracy theories and keyboard warriors.
The Proof Inc. CanTrust Index is an annual study of trust levels of Canadians and the features that make up Canada. We study and analyze topics, events and population segments unique to Canada – Quebec residents, newcomers to Canada, seniors, political party supporters and where people reside (large city versus small town). The 2019 Proof Inc. CanTrust Index, based upon an annual online survey of a sample of 1,543 Canadians 18+ years of age, was conducted February 7 - 24, 2019. It is nationally representative by region, age and gender.
For more information, visit CanTrustIndex.ca.
The Proof Strategies CanTrust Index, now in its ninth year, is a leading source of research and insights on trust in Canada. We report a distinctly Canadian story. Societies, democracies and economies cannot function without trust.
Our study uses a 7-point scale with 7 being the highest trust and 1 being the lowest. Respondents choosing 7, 6 or 5 result in the percentages of trust used in this report.
The Proof Strategies CanTrust Index is released within one month of completion to ensure the most current data and analysis, unlike older studies. Our research tells the unique story of trust among Canadians, and who they believe is trustworthy in this world of ever-increasing misinformation, conspiracy theories and keyboard warriors.
Das Vertrauen der Deutschen in die hiesige Finanzbranche ist auch fast zehn Jahre nach der Finanzkrise noch stark angeschlagen, das zeigen die Ergebnisse des Edelman Trust Barometers 2016.
Our 2016 Edelman TRUST BAROMETER for Ireland revealed trust in all four institutions has reached its highest level since the Great Recession, with business receiving the largest increase in trust among both the informed public and the larger general population.
There is a growing trust disparity that has put business in a new situation of strength, a unique position that translates into an opportunity to help mend the trust divide.
Edelman Trust Barometer 2016 - Italian launchEdelman Italia
L’indagine è stata realizzata fra il 13 ottobre e il 16 novembre del 2015 in 28 Paesi con interviste online a oltre 33.000 persone. L’indagine, giunta alla sua sedicesima edizione, è condotta dalla società Edelman Berland.
The 2017 Edelman Ireland Trust Barometer reveals a crisis in trust levels across the institutions of government, business, media and NGOs. Trust in media fell from 39 percent to 29 percent and media is now seen as the least trusted institution in Ireland. Trust in Government in Ireland remained at the same level as the previous year on 32 percent. Trust in Business and NGOs dropped and are now only 2 percentage points apart at 41 percent and 43 percent respectively.
Edelman Ireland can benchmark trust levels in your organisation compared to your competitors and wider industry. Further information, analysis and commentary on this year's Edelman Trust Barometer is available at www.edelman.ie
2015 Edelman Trust Barometer - Energy Sector ResultsEdelman
The 2015 Edelman Trust Barometer is the firm’s 15th annual trust and credibility survey. This deck reveals insights on the global energy sector.
Learn more: http://edl.mn/1FAgeVZ
For more information, please contact Joseph.Campbell@edelman.com.
2016 Edelman TRUST BAROMETER - Global ResultsEdelman
Our 2016 Edelman TRUST BAROMETER revealed trust levels in all four institutions have reached its highest level since the Great Recession, with business receiving the largest increase in trust among both the informed public and the larger general population.
There is a growing trust disparity that has put business in a new situation of strength, a unique position that translates into an opportunity to help mend the trust divide.
For more information, visit www.edelman.com/trust2016
Barómetro sobre CONFIANZA de Edelman 2016Soymimarca
Informe 2016 sobre la evolución de la confianza entre organizaciones y consumidores. Realizada con un universo de 33.000 personas +18 en 25 países, con muestras de 1.150 participantes por país (España incluida). Añade elementos comparativos con estudios de años anteriores
De Edelman Trust Barometer 2016 is het 16e jaarlijkse wereldwijde onderzoek naar vertrouwen en geloofwaardigheid. De enquête is uitgevoerd door onderzoeksbureau Edelman Berland. Het onderzoek bestond uit een twintig minuten durende online vragenlijst, die afgenomen werd tussen 13 oktober 2015 en 16 november 2015. De Trust Barometer 2016 werd uitgevoerd in 28 landen onder 32.200 respondenten uit het algemene publiek, waarvan 6.200 tot het geïnformeerde publiek (leeftijdscategorie 25-64 jaar) behoort. Geïnformeerd publiek werd gedefinieerd als hogeropgeleiden met een inkomen dat in de top 25 procent ligt van mensen in dezelfde leeftijdscategorie uit hetzelfde land. Ze volgen meerdere keren per week zakelijke en nieuwsmedia en publieke beleidsissues.
Edelman Trust Barometer Special Flash Poll - Mexico’s Trust ChallengesEdelman
Edelman Trust Barometer Special Flash Poll on Mexico’s Trust Challenges — the U.S. Perspective — conducted in mid-November in the U.S. of 1,000 people in the general population 18 years and older.
The findings provide important context on the bilateral relationship as NAFTA negotiations come to the finish line and Mexico begins its presidential campaign.
2016 Edelman Trust Barometer.
The 2016 Edelman Trust Barometer has been kindly provided by Edelman for the Woolf Institute Trust Website: www.trustcommunity.eu
For more information visit http://www.edelman.com/insights/intellectual-property/2016-edelman-trust-barometer/global-results/
Levelwise PageRank with Loop-Based Dead End Handling Strategy : SHORT REPORT ...Subhajit Sahu
Abstract — Levelwise PageRank is an alternative method of PageRank computation which decomposes the input graph into a directed acyclic block-graph of strongly connected components, and processes them in topological order, one level at a time. This enables calculation for ranks in a distributed fashion without per-iteration communication, unlike the standard method where all vertices are processed in each iteration. It however comes with a precondition of the absence of dead ends in the input graph. Here, the native non-distributed performance of Levelwise PageRank was compared against Monolithic PageRank on a CPU as well as a GPU. To ensure a fair comparison, Monolithic PageRank was also performed on a graph where vertices were split by components. Results indicate that Levelwise PageRank is about as fast as Monolithic PageRank on the CPU, but quite a bit slower on the GPU. Slowdown on the GPU is likely caused by a large submission of small workloads, and expected to be non-issue when the computation is performed on massive graphs.
Adjusting OpenMP PageRank : SHORT REPORT / NOTESSubhajit Sahu
For massive graphs that fit in RAM, but not in GPU memory, it is possible to take
advantage of a shared memory system with multiple CPUs, each with multiple cores, to
accelerate pagerank computation. If the NUMA architecture of the system is properly taken
into account with good vertex partitioning, the speedup can be significant. To take steps in
this direction, experiments are conducted to implement pagerank in OpenMP using two
different approaches, uniform and hybrid. The uniform approach runs all primitives required
for pagerank in OpenMP mode (with multiple threads). On the other hand, the hybrid
approach runs certain primitives in sequential mode (i.e., sumAt, multiply).
06-04-2024 - NYC Tech Week - Discussion on Vector Databases, Unstructured Data and AI
Discussion on Vector Databases, Unstructured Data and AI
https://www.meetup.com/unstructured-data-meetup-new-york/
This meetup is for people working in unstructured data. Speakers will come present about related topics such as vector databases, LLMs, and managing data at scale. The intended audience of this group includes roles like machine learning engineers, data scientists, data engineers, software engineers, and PMs.This meetup was formerly Milvus Meetup, and is sponsored by Zilliz maintainers of Milvus.
Quantitative Data AnalysisReliability Analysis (Cronbach Alpha) Common Method...2023240532
Quantitative data Analysis
Overview
Reliability Analysis (Cronbach Alpha)
Common Method Bias (Harman Single Factor Test)
Frequency Analysis (Demographic)
Descriptive Analysis
1. 1
The second annual study by Proof Inc. on trust levels among Canadian consumers
2017
2. 2
What is the CanTrust Index?
The Proof Inc. CanTrust Index takes a distinctly Canadian approach to
measuring and tracking Canadians’ trust in organizations, leaders,
industries and information sources, and uncovers themes, trends and
perspectives that tell us who we are.
The 2017 CanTrust Index examines several Canadian population
segments, including New Canadians, and in 2017, we have provided
deeper analysis on gender and regional differences.
3. 3
Who is Proof Inc.?
Proof Inc. identifies and engages with audiences and influencers to build trust in
companies and brands. Proof Inc. is a leading Canadian integrated marketing
communications agency with approximately 130 team members in offices in
Toronto, Ottawa, Montréal and Washington, DC. The CanTrust Index is part of
our service to our clients on how to win and preserve trust.
This survey demonstrates our commitment to knowing Canadians. The study is
an online sample of 1,500 Canadians conducted between January 16 to January
26, 2017. It is nationally representative by region, age and gender.
4. 4
Executive Summary
There is no doubt that recent events in some nations point to waning consumer trust. While our
findings overall indicate a slight decline of trust in some areas, our study shows a more positive
Canadian story in comparison to global trends.
In the wake of a rise in protectionism and distrust in immigrants in some countries, through the
2017 Proof Inc. CanTrust Index, we see a culture where New Canadians are driving the optimism
of our country, perhaps pointing in turn to a hopeful future for companies and governments seeking
to grow consumer trust.
We also find higher levels of trust among women and residents of Québec.
In contrast, people living in Western Canada are less trusting in several areas we surveyed.
There is not a gap in Canada regarding trust between higher and lower incomes. Canadians with a
household income of below $60,000 are slightly less trusting in only a few areas when compared to
those households with income over $60,000.
5. 5
Executive Summary
Specific Results:
▶ Canadians again place the highest trust in not-for-profit organizations in their ability to do
what is right for Canada, Canadians and our society. While trust in news media shows a slight
decline from last year, it remains the second most trusted category. Large corporations
continue to yield the lowest levels of trust from Canadians.
▶ Trust in Mayors and the Prime Minister remain high, with only Premiers seeing a notable
decline. Canadians still believe in our government. Although, we see the effects of relatively
low popularity of Premiers Notley and Wynne in this year’s results, with Calgarians and
Torontonians least likely to trust their Premiers.
▶ Similar to last year, familiarity breeds trust. Canadians rank their CEOs or their most senior
boss as the most trusted figures (Mayors are now tied for the same standing). Women
scored bosses even higher than the general population.
▶ Trust among New Canadians in these categories over two years remains high, with notable
2017 trust increases in governments and the Prime Minister.
6. 6
Executive Summary
▶ Only 13% of Canadians trust Donald Trump – a new category to this year’s CanTrust
Index. In fact, more than half of Canadians rated their trust in him a 1 out of a possible 7
points on the trust scale (53%).
▶ Hospitals and universities/colleges* are the sectors that yield the highest levels of
trust amongst Canadians, followed by retail pharmacies*, and food retailers. Real estate
agents/brokers*, social media platforms, and marijuana producers* yield the lowest levels
of trust.
▶ There is a small decline in trust in the following industries from 2016: broadcasting,
telecommunications/cable television, pharmaceutical, and social media platforms.
▶ The emerging marijuana sector is starting with very low trust levels. Fifty-one per cent of
Canadians report trusting drug and pharmacy chains to sell or distribute marijuana, compared to
only 21% who trust independent storefronts. Two-fifths of Canadians do not trust neither
government nor businesses to set the price on medical marijuana.
▶ Respondents in Ontario have less trust in a wide range of brands, while New Canadians and
Quebecers have more trust.
* New categories of study in 2017 CanTrust Index
7. 7
Executive Summary
▶ Canadians are placing more importance on various aspects of companies / organizations in
order to place their trust in them.
▶ A higher proportion of women place importance on job creation, open and accessible communication,
Canadian-owned companies, and support for charitable organizations. We see Canadians are placing
increasing importance on these areas compared to 2016.
▶ Similar to last year, Canadians trust product / service sampling or word-of-mouth the
most, followed by traditional editorial content (e.g. newspapers).
▶ Trust in editorial content (traditional and online) has increased slightly.
▶ Trust in traditional advertising increases from last year as well (+6), while we see a decline in levels of
trust for consumer opinion/reviews (-4), as well as blogs from bloggers people follow (-5).
▶ New Canadians, women and Quebecers are more likely to trust a wide range of information sources,
and Canadians in Vancouver are more likely not to trust in a range of information sources.
▶ When online, search engines and traditional news websites are cited as Canadians’
preferred sources to receive news.
▶ Seven-in-ten Canadians report that reading online reviews or comments do impact their
decision-making process when buying products/services.
11. 11
6. Please rank the following categories of organizations for how much you trust them to do what is right for Canada, Canadians and our
society, using a seven point scale, where ‘1’ is trust very little and ‘7’ is trust them a lot. Select one response for each. (Q9 2016)
n=1500
Key Highlights
▶ Slight decline in 2017 across the
board from 2016
▶ Canadians who place their trust in
news media to do the right thing for
Canada are more likely to be older
(52%), native French speakers (61%),
and live in Québec (60%).
▶ Younger respondents are more likely
to trust small or medium sized
corporations.
▶ Women are more likely than men to
trust not-for-profit organizations.
Trust Index 2017: 43
Trust Index 2016: 45
57%
50%
41%
39%
27%
22%
59%
54%
44%
40%
29%
19%
Not-for-profit organizations
News media
Small or medium
sized corporations
Governments
Large corporations
None of the above
Trust in Organizations
2017 Total 2016 Total
Not-for-profits and news media yield highest
levels of trust in Canadians
12. 12
6. Please rank the following categories of organizations for how much you trust them to do what is right for Canada, Canadians
and our society, using a seven point scale, where ‘1’ is trust very little and ‘7’ is trust them a lot. Select one response for each. (Q9
2016)
n=1500
TOTAL WEST ON QB ATL VAN EDM CGY TOR MTL
Total 1500 650 400 326 124 143 103 109 216 125
Not-for-profit organizations 57% 55% 55% 60% 65% 51% 53% 56% 55% 61%
News media 50% 45% 47% 60% 53% 43% 39% 43% 49% 58%
Small or medium sized corporations 41% 40% 34% 55% 37% 40% 43% 35% 32% 48%
Governments 39% 36% 41% 46% 34% 43% 37% 28% 43% 43%
Large corporations 27% 25% 22% 41% 19% 29% 29% 21% 27% 36%
None of the above 22% 25% 25% 16% 15% 28% 24% 31% 26% 18%
TRUST INDEX 43 40 40 52 42 41 40 37 41 49
=significantly higher than average =significantly lower than average
▶ There is a lower proportion of Canadians in Calgary that trust the organizations listed to do
what is right for Canada, specifically regarding their trust in government bodies, yielding the
lowest trust index score.
▶ Quebecers, especially those in Montréal, place more trust in news media, and large
corporations than the average Canadian.
Quebecers have more trust in organizations
to do what is right
13. 13
57%
50%
41%
39%
27%
22%
64%
52%
43%
64%
47%
19%
Not-for-profit organizations
News media
Small or medium
sized corporations
Governments
Large corporations
None of the above
Trust in Organizations
2017 Total New Canadians (n=75)
6. Please rank the following categories of organizations for how much you trust them to do what is right for Canada, Canadians and our
society, using a seven point scale, where ‘1’ is trust very little and ‘7’ is trust them a lot. Select one response for each. (Q9 2016)
n=1500
Trust Index 2017 Total: 43
Trust Index 2017 New Canadians: 54
Trust Index 2016 New Canadians: 46
Key Highlights
▶ New Canadians’ trust is growing.
▶ New Canadians are more likely to trust
governments and large corporations than
the general population in Canada.
▶ In addition, there is an increased proportion
of trust, even within New Canadians, in our
governments (as compared to 2016).
New Canadians T3B (Top three boxes)
Trust in Governments (2016): 46%
New Canadians more likely to trust the government
than the general population
14. 14
7. Thinking about Canada and the province and city you live in, please rank the people in each role according to where you live for how much you trust them to do
what is right for Canada, Canadians and our society, using a seven point scale, where ‘1’ is trust very little and ‘7’ is trust them a lot. Select one response for each.
. **Note-CEO item manually re-based to exclude N/A. (Q.10 2016)
51%
50%
44%
30%
30%
52%
50%
46%
34%
28%
Your CEO or most senior
boss at your employer
Your community Mayor
Your Prime Minister
Your provincial Premier
None of the above
Trust in Public Figures
2017 total 2016 total
n=1500
Key Highlights
▶ There is a lower proportion of Canadians
that trust their provincial Premier.
▶ Married Canadians (53%), those who own
their home (52%), higher HHI earners
($100k-$150k, 56%), daily Facebook users
(52%), daily Google+ users (55%) and native
French speakers (56%) are more likely to
trust their community mayor.
Not-for-profits and news media yield highest levels
of trust among Canadians
15. 15
T3B
50%
44%
36%
30%
13%
7. Thinking about Canada and the province and city you live in, please rank the people in each role according to where you live for how much you trust them to do
what is right for Canada, Canadians and our society, using a seven point scale, where ‘1’ is trust very little and ‘7’ is trust them a lot. Select one response for each.
*Note: full scale shown. Not re-based. (Q.10 2016)
12. Thinking about U.S. President-Elect/President Donald Trump, please rate how much you trust President-Elect/ President Trump and his policies and actions to
have a positive impact on people and societies in the United States and Canada and the working relationship between the two countries, using a seven point scale,
where ‘1’ is trust very little and ‘7’ is trust him a lot. Select one response
8%
6%
8%
4%
3%
18%
16%
14%
9%
4%
23%
21%
14%
17%
6%
20%
18%
16%
20%
13%
11%
11%
7%
13%
8%
8%
9%
6%
11%
13%
9%
18%
6%
25%
53%
30%
Your community Mayor
Your Prime Minister
Your CEO or most senior boss
at your employer
(if not working, opt out)
Your provincial Premier
Donald Trump
n=1500
7- TRUST HIM A
LOT
1- TRUST HIM VERY LITTLE N/A
▶ Canadians who mistrust Trump are more likely to trust the Prime Minister (47%).
More than half of Canadians trust Donald Trump
very little
16. 16
7. Thinking about Canada and the province and city you live in, please rank the people in each role according to where you live for how
much you trust them to do what is right for Canada, Canadians and our society, using a seven point scale, where ‘1’ is trust very little and
‘7’ is trust them a lot. Select one response for each. **Note-CEO item manually re-based to exclude N/A. (Q.10 2016) *low base
12. Thinking about our American neighbours please rank how much you trust President Donald Trump to do what is right for the United
States, Americans and U.S society, using a seven point scale, where ‘1’ is trust very little and ‘7’ is trust him a lot.
n=1500
TOTAL WEST ON QB ATL VAN EDM CGY TOR MTL
Total 1500 650 400 326 124 143 103 109 216 125
Your CEO or most senior boss at your
employer (if not working, opt out)
51% 56% 46% 45% 57% 50% 53%* 62% 48% 44%
Your community Mayor 50% 48% 50% 52% 55% 38% 52% 55% 49% 49%
Your Prime Minister 44% 37% 49% 45% 56% 42% 29% 27% 48% 51%
Your provincial Premier 30% 33% 26% 30% 31% 34% 35% 21% 28% 32%
None of the above 30% 30% 31% 31% 20% 34% 34% 29% 29% 28%
Donald Trump 13% 16% 13% 8% 8% 13% 17% 16% 15% 6%
=significantly higher than average =significantly lower than average
▶ Ontarians and those in Atlantic Canada are more likely to trust Justin Trudeau, while those in
Western Canada, specifically Edmonton and Calgary are less likely to trust him. In fact, 49% of
those in Edmonton and 58% of those in Calgary mistrust Trudeau (rate 1-3 out of 7).
▶ Calgarians are also more likely to mistrust their Premier (61%), as do those living in Ontario
(55%), men (53%) and those aged 50+ (53%).
Ontarians more likely to trust Trudeau
17. 17
TOTAL 18-24 25-49 50+ MALE FEMALE
Total 1500 81 756 663 721 779
Your CEO or most senior boss at your employer (if not working, opt out) 51% 57%* 50% 51% 47% 54%
Your community Mayor 50% 43% 48% 52% 47% 52%
Your Prime Minister 44% 51% 42% 44% 40% 46%
Your provincial Premier 30% 40% 30% 29% 30% 31%
None of the above 30% 22% 31% 29% 32% 28%
Donald Trump 13% 12% 13% 13% 18% 8%
▶ Half of Canadians trust their mayor and their CEO.
▶ While only a small proportion of Canadians actually report trusting Trump, men are more
likely to trust him.
▶ Women are more likely to trust the CEO at their organization.
7. Thinking about Canada and the province and city you live in, please rank the people in each role according to where you live for how
much you trust them to do what is right for Canada, Canadians and our society, using a seven point scale, where ‘1’ is trust very little and
‘7’ is trust them a lot. Select one response for each. **Note-CEO item manually re-based to exclude N/A. (Q.10 2016) *low base
12. Thinking about our American neighbours please rank how much you trust President Donald Trump to do what is right for the United
States, Americans and U.S society, using a seven point scale, where ‘1’ is trust very little and ‘7’ is trust him a lot.
n=1500
=significantly higher than average =significantly lower than average
Women more likely to trust Trudeau;
men more likely to trust Trump
18. 18
51%
50%
44%
30%
30%
61%
64%
64%
57%
20%
Your CEO or most senior
boss at your employer
Your community Mayor
Your Prime Minister
Your provincial Premier
None of the above
Trust in Public Figures
2017 total (n=1500) New Canadians (n=75)
7. Thinking about Canada and the province and city you live in, please rank the people in each role according to where you live for how much you trust them to do what is right
for Canada, Canadians and our society, using a seven point scale, where ‘1’ is trust very little and ‘7’ is trust them a lot. Select one response for each. (Q.10 2016) . **Note-CEO
item manually re-based to exclude N/A. Low base warning for New Canadians on CEO question.
n=1500
Key Highlights
▶ New Canadians are more likely to
trust public leaders in all levels of
government than the general
population.
▶ In addition, New Canadians today are
more likely to trust the Prime Minister
than last year.
New Canadians T3B Trust in the Prime
Minister (2016): 47%
New Canadians more likely to trust leaders from
all levels of government
20. 20
8. Please rank the following industry categories for how much you trust companies within these industries to do what is right for Canada, Canadians and
our society, using a seven point scale, where ‘1’ is trust very little and ‘7’ is trust them a lot. Select one response for each.(Q11 2016). Note* the lower
proportion falling into ‘none of the above’ is likely due to change in number of industries, rather than a higher proportion of Canadians who trust.
n=1500
39%
45%
39%
38%
29%
22%
20%
26%
15%
44%
43%
40%
37%
35%
34%
26%
26%
29%
Broadcasting and streaming
Food retailers
Banks
Online shopping
Telecommunications
& cable television
Pharmaceutical
Social media platforms
Energy, pipelines and resources
None of the above
Trust in Industry
2017 Total 2016 Total
Key Highlights
▶ Canadians who trust the
broadcasting/streaming industry are more
likely to be from Québec (49%), and native
French speakers (49%).
▶ Those who report trusting the
telecommunications/cable industry are
more likely to be from Québec (34%),
native French speakers (37%), retired
(33%), and own a home (30%).
▶ Those who trust pharmaceutical
companies are more likely to be earning
$75k-$100k HHI (29%).
▶ Those who trust social media platforms
are more likely to be from Québec (26%),
aged 18-24 (32%).
Lower levels of trust in many industries, except
trust in food retailers is growing
21. 21
62%
60%
48%
45%
41%
39%
39%
39%
38%
36%
33%
33%
29%
29%
28%
27%
26%
22%
21%
20%
13%
15%
Hospitals
Universities and Colleges
Retail Pharmacies
Food retailers
Loyalty points programs
Broadcasting and streaming
Banks
Home improvement retailers
Online shopping
Computer and electronic technology…
Long-term care homes
Retirement residences
Telecommunications & cable television
Auto manufacturers
Life and health insurance companies
Fast food restaurants
Energy, pipelines and resources
Pharmaceutical Companies
Real estate agents and brokers
Social media platforms
Marijuana producers
None of the above
Trust in Industry
8. Please rank the following industry categories for how much you trust companies within these industries to do what is right for Canada, Canadians
and our society, using a seven point scale, where ‘1’ is trust very little and ‘7’ is trust them a lot. Select one response for each. (Q11 2016)
n=1500
Key Highlights
▶ We added new industry sectors this
year (see yellow boxes).
▶ Married respondents are more likely to
trust hospitals (65%), banks (41%),
retirement residences (35%),
the energy industry (29%), auto
manufacturers (32%), fast food
restaurants (29%), real estate agents
(24%), and home improvement
retailers (42%).
▶ Retired Canadians are more likely to
trust hospitals (67%), retail pharmacies
(54%), banks (44%), life/health
insurance companies (35%), and
telecommunication companies (33%).
Hospitals and universities/colleges yield highest
levels of trust among Canadians
22. 22
62%
60%
48%
45%
41%
39%
39%
39%
38%
36%
33%
33%
75%
67%
51%
52%
47%
44%
52%
40%
47%
45%
36%
43%
Hospitals
Universities and Colleges
Retail Pharmacies
Food retailers
Loyalty points programs
Broadcasting and streaming
Banks
Home improvement retailers
Online shopping
Computer and electronic technology
companies and retailers
Long-term care homes
Retirement residences
Trust in Industry
2017 Total
(n=1500)
New
Canadians
(n=75)
8. Please rank the following industry categories for how much you trust companies within these industries to do what is right for Canada, Canadians
and our society, using a seven point scale, where ‘1’ is trust very little and ‘7’ is trust them a lot. Select one response for each. (Q11 2016)
n=1500
Key Highlights
▶ There are no significant
differences between the
perceptions of trust in
various industries within
New Canadians from last
year to the current year.
New Canadians place more trust in hospitals and
banks than general public
23. 23
29%
29%
28%
27%
26%
22%
21%
20%
13%
15%
35%
41%
37%
32%
44%
32%
27%
37%
19%
8%
Telecommunications & cable television
Auto manufacturers
Life and health insurance companies
Fast food restaurants
Energy, pipelines and resources
Pharmaceutical Companies
Real estate agents and brokers
Social media platforms
Marijuana producers
None of the above
Trust in Industry
2017 Total
(n=1500)
New
Canadians
(n=75)
8. Please rank the following industry categories for how much you trust companies within these industries to do what is right for Canada, Canadians
and our society, using a seven point scale, where ‘1’ is trust very little and ‘7’ is trust them a lot. Select one response for each. (Q11 2016)
n=1500
Key Highlights
▶ New Canadians are more likely than the
general population to trust:
▶ Auto manufacturers
▶ Energy, pipeline and resources
▶ Pharmaceutical companies
▶ Social Media platforms
New Canadians more likely to trust a range
of industries
24. 248. Please rank the following industry categories for how much you trust companies within these industries to do what is right for Canada, Canadians
and our society, using a seven point scale, where ‘1’ is trust very little and ‘7’ is trust them a lot. Select one response for each. (Q11 2016)
n=1500
TOTAL WEST ON QB ATL VAN EDM CGY TOR MTL
Total 1500 650 400 326 124 143 103 109 216 125
Hospitals 62% 65% 59% 58% 69% 62% 68% 64% 60% 58%
Universities and Colleges 60% 60% 56% 70% 52% 57% 64% 60% 56% 65%
Retail Pharmacies 48% 47% 42% 58% 52% 41% 45% 46% 44% 58%
Food retailers 45% 44% 41% 51% 44% 37% 45% 48% 44% 49%
Loyalty points programs 41% 42% 36% 40% 53% 35% 50% 39% 37% 35%
Broadcasting and streaming 39% 37% 35% 49% 40% 32% 43% 35% 37% 39%
Banks 39% 39% 36% 41% 40% 35% 48% 36% 40% 34%
Home improvement retailers 39% 41% 36% 39% 40% 34% 44% 40% 38% 31%
Online shopping 38% 38% 33% 44% 42% 41% 42% 37% 35% 39%
Computer and electronic tech companies and retailers 36% 37% 32% 37% 36% 38% 36% 36% 34% 34%
Long-term care homes 33% 34% 29% 36% 35% 32% 40% 28% 26% 31%
Retirement residences 33% 36% 28% 30% 39% 34% 37% 33% 28% 32%
Telecommunications & cable television 29% 30% 22% 34% 26% 24% 34% 26% 26% 24%
Auto manufacturers 29% 29% 27% 31% 28% 28% 31% 28% 31% 19%
Life and health insurance companies 28% 29% 25% 33% 27% 22% 38% 23% 25% 34%
Fast food restaurants 27% 26% 22% 37% 27% 22% 26% 26% 24% 32%
Energy, pipelines and resources 26% 33% 20% 20% 23% 22% 39% 42% 23% 16%
Pharmaceutical Companies 22% 22% 19% 26% 23% 23% 26% 19% 23% 27%
Real estate agents and brokers 21% 20% 20% 23% 25% 15% 25% 18% 20% 18%
Social media platforms 20% 18% 18% 26% 23% 22% 20% 15% 20% 25%
Marijuana producers 13% 15% 13% 10% 12% 15% 18% 16% 13% 10%
None of the above 15% 16% 18% 10% 14% 19% 15% 19% 19% 10%
=significantly higher than average =significantly lower than average
▶ Quebecers have higher levels of trust in many industries. In Edmonton and Calgary, there is more trust
in energy, pipelines and resources. A lower proportion of Torontonians trust long-term care homes.
Lower levels of trust in Ontario in a
wide range of industries
25. 25
n=1500
TOTAL 18-24 25-49 50+ MALE FEMALE
Total 1500 81 756 663 721 779
Hospitals 62% 67% 60% 63% 64% 60%
Universities and Colleges 60% 59% 59% 62% 60% 61%
Retail Pharmacies 48% 44% 46% 52% 47% 50%
Food retailers 45% 48% 43% 47% 43% 47%
Loyalty points programs 41% 41% 41% 41% 37% 45%
Broadcasting and streaming 39% 38% 38% 40% 38% 41%
Banks 39% 43% 37% 40% 37% 40%
Home improvement retailers 39% 44% 37% 41% 39% 39%
Online shopping 38% 40% 41% 34% 37% 39%
Computer and electronic technology companies and retailers 36% 43% 36% 35% 34% 37%
Long-term care homes 33% 33% 31% 35% 33% 33%
Retirement residences 33% 36% 32% 33% 31% 34%
Telecommunications & cable television 29% 30% 26% 31% 27% 30%
Auto manufacturers 29% 33% 29% 29% 27% 30%
Life and health insurance companies 28% 37% 26% 31% 26% 30%
Fast food restaurants 27% 30% 26% 28% 27% 27%
Energy, pipelines and resources 26% 30% 25% 27% 26% 26%
Pharmaceutical Companies 22% 28% 23% 21% 21% 23%
Real estate agents and brokers 21% 26% 21% 21% 18% 24%
Social media platforms 20% 32% 21% 18% 19% 22%
Marijuana producers 13% 17% 16% 10% 13% 13%
None of the above 15% 10% 17% 13% 15% 15%
=significantly higher than average =significantly lower than average
▶ Men and women have differing levels of trust for loyalty card programs, and real estate agents/brokers.
▶ Younger Canadians report more trust in social media platforms.
8. Please rank the following industry categories for how much you trust companies within these industries to do what is right for Canada, Canadians
and our society, using a seven point scale, where ‘1’ is trust very little and ‘7’ is trust them a lot. Select one response for each. (Q11 2016)
Trust differs based on age for pharmacies,
online shopping and marijuana
26. 26
56%
51%
45%
41%
41%
34%
31%
30%
22%
17%
Bombardier
Facebook
Samsung smart phones
Canada Goose
Nestle
Roots
Volkswagen
Lululemon Athletics
TOMS
None of the above
Trust in Brands
Q9. On a scale of 1-7, with 1 being the lowest and 7 being the highest, how much do you trust the following companies
and brands for reliable, high quality products or services? Select one response for each. (Q11b in qnr).
n=1500
Key Highlights
▶ Those who trust Bombardier for reliable
and high quality products are more likely to
be employed full-time (59%), high income
earners ($150k+, 65%), and native English
speakers (58%).
▶ Married respondents (54%) and those with
teenagers at home (62%) are more likely
to trust Facebook for reliable and high
quality services.
▶ Canadians who trust Samsung
smartphones are more likely to have
younger children at home (<13 years,
52%), and lower income ($25k-$50k,
54%).
More than half trust Facebook and Bombardier
for reliability & quality
27. 27
Q9. On a scale of 1-7, with 1 being the lowest and 7 being the highest, how much do you trust the following companies
and brands for reliable, high quality products or services? Select one response for each. (Q11b in qnr).
n=1500
TOTAL WEST ON QB ATL VAN EDM CGY TOR MTL
Total 1500 650 400 326 124 143 103 109 216 125
Bombardier 56% 55% 61% 50% 59% 54% 51% 56% 63% 51%
Facebook 51% 52% 46% 55% 58% 45% 51% 52% 49% 57%
Samsung smart phones 45% 44% 42% 46% 55% 38% 42% 48% 40% 44%
Canada Goose 41% 40% 43% 44% 36% 32% 40% 47% 45% 44%
Nestle 41% 39% 31% 58% 44% 41% 37% 33% 30% 57%
Roots 34% 30% 29% 46% 42% 29% 23% 28% 32% 47%
Volkswagen 31% 32% 30% 31% 32% 34% 30% 28% 31% 26%
Lululemon Athletics 30% 36% 26% 27% 25% 41% 33% 39% 28% 33%
TOMS 22% 25% 25% 15% 21% 28% 22% 28% 30% 17%
None of the above 17% 17% 17% 16% 15% 20% 19% 17% 19% 14%
=significantly higher than average =significantly lower than average
▶ Torontonians are more likely to trust Bombardier, as well as TOMS. Respondents in Montréal are more
likely to trust Nestle and Roots. Those in Calgary and Vancouver are more likely to trust Lululemon.
▶ There is a lower proportion of Ontarians who trust Facebook, Nestle, Roots, and Lululemon.
▶ A higher proportion of Canadians in Atlantic Canada trust Samsung smart phones.
Brands yield different levels of trust in
different regions in Canada
28. 28
Q9. On a scale of 1-7, with 1 being the lowest and 7 being the highest, how much do you trust the following companies and brands for
reliable, high quality products or services? Select one response for each. (Q11b in qnr). Note* Low base warning due to re-base.
Key Highlights
▶ New Canadians place more trust
than the general population of
Canadians in the following brands:
▶ Canada Goose
▶ Roots
▶ Volkswagen
Note* brands are re-based to
remove those who indicated n/a
New Canadians place more trust in almost all
brands than Canadians as a whole
64%
56%
54%
49%
48%
43%
42%
36%
34%
64%
69%
58%
58%
56%
47%
49%
53%
63%
Bombardier
Canada Goose
Facebook
Nestle
Samsung smart phones
TOMS
Lululemon Athletics
Roots
Volkswagen
Trust in Brands
2017 Total (n=1500) New Canadians (n=75)
30. 30
74%
71%
71%
70%
63%
48%
29%
11%
69%
67%
64%
68%
56%
46%
32%
13%
The organization creates jobs
and invests in my community
The leadership openly
communicates and is accessible
They are Canadian owned
I enjoy their products or services
They support charitable causes
in my community
I know someone who likes working there
The leaders use social media
channels to communicate
None of the above
2017 total 2016 total
10. Please rank the following actions based on level of importance in determining how much you trust an organization to do what is right for Canada, Canadians and our society,
using a seven point scale, where ‘1’ is not that important and ‘7’ means very important. Select one response for each. *note – items shortened for convenience (Q12 – 2016)
n=1500
All Canadians Key Highlights
▶ A higher proportion of Canadians are
deeming it important that organizations
create jobs or invest in their community,
that leaders are open and accessible in
their communication, that companies are
Canadian, and that they support
charitable causes within their community
– a significant increase from 2016.
▶ Those with children in the household trust
organizations who create jobs or invest in
their community (79%).
▶ The results were consistent with no
regional surprises.
A higher proportion of Canadians are placing
importance on various actions
31. 31
TOTAL 18-24 25-49 50+ MALE FEMALE
Total 1500 81 756 663 721 779
The organization creates jobs and invests in my
community
74% 74% 74% 74% 72% 76%
The leadership openly communicates and is
accessible
71% 74% 69% 73% 68% 74%
They are Canadian owned 71% 74% 69% 73% 67% 75%
I enjoy their products or services 70% 67% 69% 70% 67% 72%
They support charitable causes in my
community
63% 58% 62% 64% 59% 66%
I know someone who likes working there 48% 49% 51% 45% 47% 50%
The leaders use social media channels to
communicate
29% 35% 32% 25% 26% 31%
None of the above 11% 11% 12% 10% 12% 11%
▶ A higher proportion of women place importance on these areas for organizations to take action
is driving up the overall average.
▶ Canadians aged 25-49 are more likely to trust an organization if they know someone who
enjoys working there, or if a leader uses social media to communicate.
10. Please rank the following actions based on level of importance in determining how much you trust an organization to do what is right for Canada, Canadians and our society, using
a seven point scale, where ‘1’ is not that important and ‘7’ means very important. Select one response for each. *note – items shortened for convenience (Q12 – 2016)
n=1500
=significantly higher than average =significantly lower than average
Women place more importance on a number of factors
32. 32
27%
45%
21%
7%
31%
45%
18%
6%
Very important
Somewhat important
Not very important
Not at all important
CEO Visibility & Accessibility
11. To what extent do you feel it is important for the CEO of a major company to be visible and accessible to the public on social media? Select one response. (Q13 2016)
n=1500
Key Highlights
▶ Canadians who deem it important
for a CEO to be visible and
accessible on social media are
more likely to be women (75%),
have children in the household
(81%), and daily users of social
media (all except LinkedIn).
▶ Those who are retired are more
likely to say it is not at all important
(10%).
Top two box
2017= 72%
2016 =76%
Lower proportion of Canadians deem CEO
visibility and accessibility important
33. 33
TOTAL 18-24 25-49 50+ MALE FEMALE
Total 1500 81 756 663 721 779
TOP 2 BOX 72% 79% 73% 70% 69% 75%
Very important 27% 25% 23% 32% 26% 28%
Somewhat important 45% 54% 50% 38% 43% 47%
Not very important 21% 15% 21% 21% 22% 20%
Not at all important 7% 6% 6% 9% 9% 5%
BOTTOM 2 BOX 28% 21% 27% 30% 31% 25%
▶ Women are more likely to deem it important for a CEO to be visible and accessible on social
media, while a higher proportion of men deem it not at all important.
▶ Those aged 25-49 place some importance, and older respondents are more likely to place a
lot or no importance, on CEO visibility.
11. To what extent do you feel it is important for the CEO of a major company to be visible and accessible to the public on social media? Select one response. (Q13 2016)
n=1500
=significantly higher than average =significantly lower than average
TOTAL WEST ON QB ATL VAN EDM CGY TOR MTL
Total 1500 650 400 326 124 143 103 109 216 125
TOP 2 BOX 72% 72% 74% 69% 72% 71% 72% 73% 71% 67%
Very important 27% 26% 30% 24% 30% 25% 32% 23% 32% 19%
Somewhat important 45% 46% 44% 45% 42% 46% 40% 50% 39% 48%
Not very important 21% 20% 19% 24% 21% 24% 22% 21% 21% 24%
Not at all important 7% 7% 7% 7% 7% 5% 6% 6% 7% 9%
BOTTOM 2 BOX 28% 28% 26% 31% 28% 29% 28% 27% 29% 33%
Varying levels of importance for CEO visibility on
social media by age & gender
35. 35
1. Using a seven point scale, where ‘1’ is strongly distrust and ‘7’ is completely trust, to what extent do you trust the following sources of
information about a product, service, brand or organization? Top 3 Box Summary. Note: items shortened. HHI=household income
n=1500
Net: Editorial
57% 2017
55% 2016
Net: Advertising
41% 2017
37% 2016
Product sampling and recommendations yield
highest levels of trust
76%
74%
52%
47%
43%
43%
38%
37%
29%
27%
26%
8%
73%
75%
49%
51%
44%
40%
38%
31%
34%
29%
24%
9%
Sampling the product or service
Recommendations or word of mouth
Editorial content (e.g. newspaper)
Consumer opinion or reviews posted online
Emails or newsletters you signed up for
Company or organization websites
Editorial content (on online news sites)
Traditional advertising (e.g TV, radio, print)
Blogs from bloggers you follow
Information from a company on social media
Online advertising by companies
None of the above
Trust in Media Sources
Total 2017
Total 2016
36. 36
1. Using a seven point scale, where ‘1’ is strongly distrust and ‘7’ is completely trust, to what extent do you trust the
following sources of information about a product, service, brand or organization? Top 3 Box Summary.
n=1500
TOTAL WEST ON QB ATL VAN EDM CGY TOR MTL
Total 1500 650 400 326 124 143 103 109 216 125
Sampling the product or service 76% 76% 80% 67% 83% 67% 75% 76% 80% 65%
Recommendations by someone you know or
word of mouth
74% 75% 80% 67% 72% 71% 75% 76% 79% 64%
NET: Editorial 57% 54% 57% 67% 54% 45% 54% 53% 57% 63%
Editorial content such as a story in a newspaper, on
TV or on radio
52% 48% 49% 64% 50% 38% 49% 46% 49% 58%
Editorial content shared through online news sites 38% 36% 37% 46% 31% 27% 41% 42% 37% 41%
Consumer opinion or reviews posted online 47% 49% 50% 41% 50% 46% 47% 46% 49% 38%
NET: Advertising (Incl. Social Media) 45% 44% 40% 52% 48% 31% 44% 44% 45% 48%
Online advertising by companies or organizations 26% 24% 22% 34% 28% 18% 23% 28% 25% 30%
Traditional advertising in television, radio, print or
billboard by companies or organizations
37% 35% 34% 44% 39% 26% 37% 35% 38% 41%
Information shared by a company or organization on
social media
27% 25% 24% 36% 23% 17% 27% 24% 27% 31%
Emails or newsletters you signed up for 43% 41% 43% 48% 43% 44% 43% 37% 44% 45%
Company or organization websites 43% 44% 41% 45% 40% 39% 43% 46% 45% 41%
Information shared on social media channels by
a friend, family member or someone you know
42% 43% 41% 43% 40% 37% 42% 46% 40% 37%
Blogs from bloggers you follow 29% 28% 31% 26% 30% 27% 25% 31% 33% 26%
None of the above 8% 8% 7% 8% 6% 15% 9% 7% 7% 6%
=significantly higher than average =significantly lower than average
▶ Regional differences indicate a lower level of trust within Vancouver. Quebecers are more likely
to trust a wide range of information sources.
Quebecers have more trust in various sources,
and Vancouver mistrusts
37. 37
1. Using a seven point scale, where ‘1’ is strongly distrust and ‘7’ is completely trust, to what extent do you trust
the following sources of information about a product, service, brand or organization? Top 3 Box Summary.
n=1500
TOTAL 18-24 25-49 50+ MALE FEMALE
Total 1500 81 756 663 721 779
Sampling the product or service 76% 78% 74% 78% 72% 79%
Recommendations by someone you know or word of mouth 74% 74% 73% 75% 67% 80%
NET: Editorial 57% 65% 56% 58% 54% 60%
Editorial content such as a story in a newspaper, on TV or on radio 52% 60% 49% 54% 49% 55%
Editorial content shared through online news sites 38% 46% 38% 37% 36% 40%
Consumer opinion or reviews posted online 47% 52% 50% 44% 44% 51%
NET: Advertising (Incl. Social Media) 45% 56% 44% 46% 41% 49%
Online advertising by companies or organizations 26% 38% 24% 26% 24% 28%
Traditional advertising in television, radio, print or billboard by
companies or organizations
37% 44% 35% 38% 33% 41%
Information shared by a company or organization on social media 27% 42% 27% 25% 24% 30%
Emails or newsletters you signed up for 43% 52% 42% 44% 39% 47%
Company or organization websites 43% 57% 43% 41% 38% 47%
Information shared on social media channels by a friend, family
member or someone you know
42% 38% 39% 46% 37% 47%
Blogs from bloggers you follow 29% 36% 33% 22% 26% 31%
None of the above 8% 7% 9% 6% 9% 6%
=significantly higher than average =significantly lower than average
▶ Men and women have different levels of trust for almost all sources of information.
A higher proportion of younger respondents trust advertising, and social media, while those aged
25-49 trust consumer reviews or bloggers, and those aged 50+ trust products they have sampled,
or people they know have used and shared online.
There’s a trust gap between women and men
38. 38
2. When looking at news sources please indicate which of the following sources you prefer to get your news about current events.
Please select the top three responses that most apply. *note <5% values not shown on chart
39%
27%
9%
8%
5%
15%
21%
15%
19%
8%
6%
7%
6%
13%
14%
19%
13%
9%
9%
11%
7%
Word of mouth
Editorial content such as a story
in a newspaper, on TV or on radio
Editorial content shared
through online news sites
Information shared on social media channels by a
friend, family member or someone you know
Mobile news apps
Your Facebook news feed
Information shared by a company
or organization on social media
Blogs from bloggers you follow
LinkedIn
Your Twitter feed
Preferred Sources to Receive Current Events News
Choice 1 Choice 2 Choice 3
n=1500
Key Highlights
▶ Canadians who are more likely
to choose traditional forms of
editorial content as their first
choice to receive news are
more likely to be Quebecers
(39%), from Montréal (36%),
aged 50+ (31%), retired (35%)
and men (30%).
▶ Daily Facebook users are more
likely to choose social media
(shared by family or
companies, 10%/4%), their
Facebook feed (7%), or
bloggers (2%).
Sum
2017
Sum
2016
67% 58%
62% 69%
43% 52%
40% n/a
22% 29%
19% 31%
22% 25%
15% 14%
6% 10%
6% 10%
=significantly higher than last year
=significantly lower than last year
Canadians increasingly prefer word of mouth as
their source of news
39. 39
2. When looking at news sources please indicate which of the following sources you prefer to get your news about current events.
Please select the top three responses that most apply. Choice #1 Summary. *note <5% values not shown on chart
n=1500
1ST CHOICE SUMMARY TABLE TOTAL 18-24 25-49 50+ MALE FEMALE
Total 1500 81 756 663 721 779
Word of mouth 39% 33% 38% 41% 34% 44%
Editorial content such as a story in a newspaper, on TV or on radio 27% 26% 23% 31% 30% 24%
Editorial content shared through online news sites 9% 9% 10% 8% 11% 8%
Information shared on social media channels by a friend, family member
or someone you know
8% 5% 8% 9% 7% 10%
Mobile news apps 5% 6% 7% 4% 7% 4%
Your Facebook news feed 4% 9% 6% 3% 4% 4%
Information shared by a company or organization on social media 4% 9% 4% 3% 4% 3%
Blogs from bloggers you follow 2% 1% 3% 1% 2% 2%
LinkedIn 1% - 1% 1% 1% 1%
Your Twitter feed 1% 2% 1% *% 1% 1%
=significantly higher than average =significantly lower than average
▶ Men are more likely to select traditional or online editorial content, while women are more
likely to prefer word of mouth as their preferred source of information to receive news.
▶ Those aged 25-49 are more likely to prefer mobile news apps, social media or bloggers, while
50+ respondents prefer editorial content in newspapers, TV or radio.
Respondents 50+ prefer editorial as their
preferred information source
40. 40
Sum
2017
Sum
2016
Search engines 71% n/a
Websites of traditional news outlets
such as CTV, CBC or the Globe and Mail
67% 82%
Information shared on social media
channels by a friend, family etc.
44% n/a
Facebook 21% 41%
Mobile apps of traditional news outlets 25% 43%
Your homepage 13% 33%
Online only news sites such as
Huffington Post or Notable Blogs
27% 47%
LinkedIn 5% 10%
Twitter 5% 12%
Other 21% 31%
39%
28%
12%
5%
19%
25%
16%
8%
10%
11%
13%
14%
16%
8%
11%
6%
14%
13%
Current Events News
Choice 1 Choice 2 Choice 3
3. When it comes to online sources specifically, what are your preferred sources for news about current events?
Please select the top three responses that most apply. *note <5% values not shown on chart
n=1500
Key Highlights
▶ Higher income earners
($100k-$150k) are more
likely to prefer search
engines (46%).
▶ Native French speakers
are more likely than
average to prefer search
engines (48%).
▶ Native English speakers
are more likely to prefer
traditional news websites
(33%).
Online search engines and news websites are the
preferred online sources for news
41. 41
4. When reading an online review or comment from others who have purchased the same product or service you are seeking has reading the
review ever been the reason you have chosen to buy or not buy that product or service? Select one response. Q.7 – 2016
*HHI = household income
n=1500
Key Highlights
▶ Canadians who report being influenced
by online reviews are more likely to be
married (72%), have children (78%), work
full-time (73%), have a higher HHI*
(>$100k, ~80%), native English speakers
(72%), and are using social media daily
(all social media except Google+).
▶ Those who say ‘no’ are more likely to be
separated/divorced (28%), retired (28%),
and native French speakers (29%).
▶ Ontarians (specifically in Toronto), and
Calgarians report that online reviews
have impacted their decision-making for
products/services.
Yes
70%
No
22%
N/A
8%
Influenced by online reviews to
purchase product/service?
A majority of Canadians report they are
influenced by online reviews
43. 438. Please rank the following industry categories for how much you trust companies within these industries to do what is right for Canada, Canadians and
our society, using a seven point scale, where ‘1’ is trust very little and ‘7’ is trust them a lot. Select one response for each. (Q11 2016)
n=1500
▶ We added new industry sectors
this year (see yellow boxes).
▶ Marijuana is a new area of study
to the CanTrust Index this year.
Marijuana producers yield lowest level of trust
from Canadians
62%
60%
48%
45%
41%
39%
39%
39%
38%
36%
33%
33%
29%
29%
28%
27%
26%
22%
21%
20%
13%
15%
Hospitals
Universities and Colleges
Retail Pharmacies
Food retailers
Loyalty points programs
Broadcasting and streaming
Banks
Home improvement retailers
Online shopping
Computer and electronic technology…
Long-term care homes
Retirement residences
Telecommunications & cable television
Auto manufacturers
Life and health insurance companies
Fast food restaurants
Energy, pipelines and resources
Pharmaceutical Companies
Real estate agents and brokers
Social media platforms
Marijuana producers
None of the above
Trust in Industry
44. 44
13. On a scale of 1-7, with 1 being the lowest and 7 being the highest who do you trust to be authorized
to sell or distribute marijuana for medical purposes or recreational use? Select one response for each.
n=1500
Key Highlights
▶ Older, and retired Canadians (57%), who
own their home (53%) & have a higher HHI
($150k+, 63%) are more likely to trust drug
stores and pharmacies.
▶ Retirees are also more likely to trust
government-run clinics (57%).
▶ A higher proportion of full-time employees
(24%) and daily Facebook (23%) and
Instagram (27%) users report trusting
privately-owned dispensaries.
51%
48%
34%
32%
21%
33%
Drug and pharmacy stores and chains
Government-run clinics or dispensaries
Licenced Marijuana producers
Marijuana clinics
Privately-owned dispensary storefronts
None of the above
Trust in Marijuana Distributors
(Medical or Recreational)
Half of Canadians trust pharmacies or
government-run clinics for distribution
45. 45
TOTAL WEST ON QB ATL VAN EDM CGY TOR MTL
Total 1500 650 400 326 124 143 103 109 216 125
Drug and pharmacy stores and chains 51% 52% 48% 54% 49% 45% 53% 58% 47% 48%
Government-run clinics or dispensaries 48% 49% 51% 47% 43% 52% 49% 39% 49% 42%
Licenced Marijuana producers 34% 37% 31% 28% 41% 33% 35% 41% 29% 30%
Marijuana clinics 32% 34% 32% 29% 31% 28% 35% 34% 31% 32%
Privately-owned dispensary storefronts 21% 22% 21% 18% 27% 20% 25% 23% 22% 14%
None of the above 33% 33% 34% 34% 34% 33% 33% 34% 36% 38%
▶ A lower proportion of Quebecers report trusting licenced marijuana producers.
Specifically in Montréal, a lower proportion trust privately-owned dispensaries.
▶ In Calgary, there is a lower proportion of people who report trusting government-run
clinics or dispensaries.
13. On a scale of 1-7, with 1 being the lowest and 7 being the highest who do you trust to be authorized to
sell or distribute marijuana for medical purposes or recreational use? Select one response for each.
n=1500
=significantly higher than average =significantly lower than average
Western Canada more likely to trust licensed
marijuana producers
46. 46
TOTAL 18-24 25-49 50+ MALE FEMALE
Total 1500 81 756 663 721 779
Drug and pharmacy stores and chains 51% 53% 47% 55% 50% 52%
Government-run clinics or dispensaries 48% 48% 46% 51% 49% 48%
Licenced Marijuana producers 34% 40% 35% 31% 31% 36%
Marijuana clinics 32% 42% 33% 30% 29% 35%
Privately-owned dispensary storefronts 21% 26% 24% 18% 21% 21%
None of the above 33% 32% 35% 32% 35% 32%
▶ Canadians aged 25-49 are more likely to trust privately-owned dispensaries than the
average Canadian.
▶ Women are more likely than men to trust licences marijuana producers, and clinics to
sell or distribute medical or recreational marijuana.
13. On a scale of 1-7, with 1 being the lowest and 7 being the highest who do you trust to be authorized to
sell or distribute marijuana for medical purposes or recreational use? Select one response for each.
n=1500
=significantly higher than average =significantly lower than average
Older Canadians more likely to trust drug stores
and pharmacies
47. 47
14. On a scale of 1-7, with 1 being the lowest and 7 being the highest who do / would you trust to set
the price on marijuana to be used for medical purposes? Select one response for each
n=1500
39%
33%
28%
21%
42%
Federal Government
Provincial Government
Drug / pharmacy stores and chains or retailers
Marijuana businesses and manufacturers
None of the above
Trust in Organizations to Set Price
of Marijuana (Medical) Key Highlights
▶ Retired respondents (45%) and higher income
respondents ($100k-$150k, 46%) are more likely to
trust the Federal government to set the price of
medical marijuana.
▶ Those working full-time (23%) and those with
children (aged 13-17, 30%) are more likely to trust
marijuana businesses.
▶ Those who are separated or divorced (34%) are
more likely to trust drug stores/pharmacies.
▶ Low income Canadians (HHI$25 to <$50K, 49%),
those who do not deem it important for a CEO to be
on social media (47%) and those who are not
influenced by online reviews (51%) are all more likely
NOT to trust any of the organizations listed.
▶ From respondents who do trust marijuana producers,
the highest proportion place trust in marijuana
businesses and manufacturers, even over
government bodies and pharmacies.
▶ The results are fairly even between men and women.
Almost half would not trust any proposed
organizations to set price
48. 48
TOTAL WEST ON QB ATL VAN EDM CGY TOR MTL
Total 1500 650 400 326 124 143 103 109 216 125
Federal Government 39% 39% 39% 40% 35% 39% 44% 31% 37% 42%
Provincial Government 33% 34% 31% 35% 25% 39% 39% 27% 31% 34%
Drug / pharmacy stores and chains or retailers 28% 28% 21% 35% 31% 26% 31% 27% 22% 34%
Marijuana businesses and manufacturers 21% 26% 16% 17% 26% 25% 27% 28% 16% 21%
None of the above 42% 42% 45% 40% 37% 45% 35% 47% 47% 41%
▶ While Western Canadians are more likely to trust marijuana businesses & manufacturers (26%),
those in Ontario and Québec are less likely to trust them (16%/17%, respectively).
▶ Quebecers are more likely to trust drug/pharmacy stores (35%), while Ontarians are less likely to
trust them (21%).
▶ On the other hand, Torontonians are less likely to trust drug/pharmacy stores (22%) and
marijuana businesses (16%).
14. On a scale of 1-7, with 1 being the lowest and 7 being the highest who do / would you trust to
set the price on marijuana to be used for medical purposes? Select one response for each.
n=1500
=significantly higher than average =significantly lower than average
Western Canadians have differing trust levels for
drug stores & marijuana businesses
51. 51
65% speak English
25% speak French
5% speak Chinese
(incl. Mandarin/Cantonese
*note: all other languages
5% or less
18 to 24
25 to 34
35 to 44
45 to 54
55+
6%
22%
20%
20%
32%
Profile of respondents
Age
Marital Status
27% Single, never married
59%
10%
4%
Married/living common-law
Separated/divorced
Widowed
52. 52
49%
34%
14%
3%
University or higher (incl. some)
College/CEGEP (incl. some)
Secondary School (incl. some)
Grade School or less (incl. some)
Profile of respondents
Education
Employment
66%employed
24% are retired
3% are students
4% are unemployed
Sales/service/clerical 33%
Manual labour 5%
Skilled/technical labour 12%
Professional/executive 37%
Supervisory/managerial 12%
< $25K 7%
>$25K - <$60K 25%
>$60K - < $75K 11%
>$75K - < $100K 14%
> $100K 23%
*note: Refused 18%, DK 1%
Average HHI $76k
53. 53
Profile of respondents
Tenure in Canada
3%
6%
11%
12%
9%
59%
Less than 2 years
2 to less than 5 years
5 to less than 10 years
10 to less than 15 years
15 to less than 20 years
20 years or more
Note* Tenure in Canada only asked to people born
outside Canada
55% are the primary shopper;
38% shop with another
Own 67%
Rent or Lease 25%
Neither
(living at home with parents or with
someone else)
7%
Under 13 years of age 17%
13 to 17 years of age 9%
None of the above 78%
54. 54
DAILY
(BASE: ALL
CANADIANS)
DAILY
(BASE: WEEKLY
USERS)
WEEKLY
(BASE: ALL
CANADIANS)
WEEKLY
(BASE: ALL
CANADIANS)
2017 2017 2017 2016
64% 85% 75% 74%
30% 47% 63% 64%
23% 62% 37% 34%
9% 35% 25% 30%
13% 57% 23% 24%
16% 66% 24% 19%
9% 37% 24% 18%
7% 61% 12% n/a
None of the
above
21% 21% 7% 8%
=significantly higher than
last year
=significantly lower than
last year
Profile of respondents