Connected Home Devices

No other vendor offers the combination of timely, consistent and accurate tracking of 22 different product categories spanning audio, video and computing,

April 25, 2012 11:18 dmercer

Strategy Analytics has been designing and analysing large scale consumer surveys for many years. Some of this work has been used by our industry analysts to support their regular market and competition tracking. We have also conducted frequent consumer surveys to support proprietary project and consulting activities.

Recognising that every client has its own particular set of interests, questions and perspectives, we have now opened up some of the results of these surveys to our client base via a powerful new web-based interface and analysis tool. The ConsumerMetrix service collates the results of three years’ worth of survey results, comprising more than 15000 online consumer interviews and offering millions of unique datapoints. Survey results are easily selected and instantly available according to the needs of the individual user, and can be downloaded in Excel and Powerpoint format for incorporation into customers’ own reports.

ConsumerMetrix surveys cover the US, France, Germany, Italy and the UK. Additional international market coverage, including Canada, Spain, China, India, Japan, South Korea, Russia, the Nordic region, Poland, Hungary, Brazil, Mexico and Indonesia, is available at the request of subscribers.

Subscribers can use ConsumerMetrix to assess survey data about the world’s leading technology and service provider brands and who their current and potential customers are.

ConsumerMetrix: Major Technology Brands

Acer, Apple, Asus, Compaq, Dell, Emachines, Facebook, Gateway, Grundig, HP, HTC, JVC, LG, LinkedIn, Motorola, MySpace, Nokia, Packard Bell, Panasonic, Philips, RIM/Blackberry, Samsung, Sanyo, Sharp, Sony, SonyEricsson, Toshiba, Twitter, Vizio, Youtube

 

ConsumerMetrix: Major Service Provider Brands

3, AT&T/Bell South/Cingular, Bouyges Telecom, BT, Comcast, DirecTV, Dish, E-Plus, Free, Kabel Deutschland, Mediaset PremiumNeuf Cegetel, O2, Orange, SFR, Sky, Sprint/Nextel, TalkTalk, Telecom Italia, T-Home, TIM, Time Warner Cable, T-Mobile, United Internet, Verizon/Alltel, Virgin Media, Virgin Mobile, Vodafone/Arcor, WIND

 

ConsumerMetrix is designed to answer key tactical, consumer-facing questions like:

·         How many people plan to buy an Xbox 360 or PS3 during the next 12 months?

·         How do nations vary in usage of digital video recorders?

·         How do the profiles of Samsung and Sony customers compare?

·         Which television service providers have the highest satisfaction ratings?

·         Which brands are people most likely to choose when they next purchase a TV, PC or mobile phone?

·         How do the demographics of Apple v. PC owners compare?

·         How many people are using the major OTT video services and which devices are they watching them on?

·         How much do consumers expect to pay for iPads or other tablets?

·         How useful do consumers find TV mobile phone apps?

·         Which consumers are using multiscreen TV?

·         How many Sky Digital customers plan to drop the service during the coming 12 months?

 

ConsumerMetrix covers a wide range of themes and technologies related to the digital consumer, television, video and media sectors. The outline is presented below:

 

ConsumerMetrix Survey Themes

ConsumerMetrix Product Segmentation

          Attitudes to payment and finance

          Household device ownership

          Personal device usage

          Device purchase intentions

          Device price expectations

          Brand ownership

          Brand purchase intentions and preferences

          Service provider customers

          TV, Fixed Broadband, Mobile Broadband, Mobile phone, Home phone

          Broadband and television access technologies

          Television service fees and satisfaction

          Managed home services

          3D television and video

          Advanced television services and features: availability, usage, perceived value and interest

          Television service: propensity to churn

          Future television concepts

          Online television and video services and applications

          Connected video device usage

          Social networking users and brands

          Consumer Devices: Connected TV, HDTV, 3DTV, LCD/plasma TV, Blu-ray, Xbox 360, PS3, Wii, PS2, PS Vita, Home cinema, Home computer (desktop, portable, PC, Mac), Handheld games (PSP, Nintendo), Digital TV set-top box, Apple TV, Connected TV boxes, mobile phone, iPhone, smartphone, iPad, tablet, broadband WiFi router, Internet radio, camcorder, e-reader, home monitoring camera, iPod, personal audio player

          Broadband/TV Access Technologies: Cable, xDSL, Fiber, WiMax, Mobile data card/dongle, satellite, terrestrial broadcast, IPTV

          Advanced TV Features (selected examples): VOD, Pause/rewind live TV, Series recording, Mobile phone app, caller ID, whole home DVR, internet access

          Online TV device usage: TV/PC, TV/console, TV/media server, TV/Blu-ray, TV/digital media player, Connected TV, PC, Tablet, Smartphone

 

We are excited by the strong interest already shown in this service, which we believe is unique in many respects. Please email digitalconsumer@strategyanalytics.com for further details and a personal demonstration.

David Mercer


November 10, 2011 15:19 dmercer

I think I must amaze some of my younger colleagues when I show them one of our ancient hard copy multi-client studies, a few dusty samples of which I keep stacked away in a cupboard in my office. The fact that a research report can exist on paper alone takes some getting used to in this online era.

 I have little cause to refer to them nowadays, of course, but that changed recently when Strategy Analytics decided to renew its focus on smart home. Back in 1986, shortly before I joined the company, it published a study called “The Interactive Home”, so I was curious to see how some of those predictions stacked up with the benefits of 25 years of hindsight.

 

Sure enough, we talked about the concept of “smart home” in that report, largely in the context of home automation, management and security. We noted in particular that in Germany “there seems little or no coherent drive twoards realisation of ‘Smart Home’ concepts at present”. A key obstacle was the high levels of rented and apartment accommodation, which reduced the need for automation and security systems.

 

The conclusions in the UK also make interesting reading: we identified a “growing body of serious PC owners” who would “help open up the information-related interactive sectors”, as well as opportunities in interactive television and electronic publishing. The study also concluded that “energy telemetry” was “likely to emerge as a prime investment area in the early 1990s”.

 

The study had a 10-year forecast horizon, which is fairly ambitious compared to regular analyst reports. We may laugh now at a forecast of what would happen in the late 1990s, but that seemed as far off in 1986 as the 2020s seem today. And in fact, as so often happens with emerging technologies, while the long-term scenarios were broadly correct, the future timing of events was misunderstood. And in general the report was over-optimistic in terms of predicting the speed with which new “smart home” services would emerge as mass market opportunities.

 

Given those past uncertainties and false dawns, the question posed by my colleague, Bill Ablondi, is right on the mark: “Smart Homes: Why Now? He identifies a number of reasons to think that we may not have to wait another 25 years before true interactive home technologies become widespread, including:

 

·         Consumers becoming increasingly connected via mobile devices  

·         Broadband service providers need to develop additional revenue generating units (RGUs) to offset declining growth in traditional businesses  

·         Expansion of offerings from traditional home security systems providers into self-monitoring and control products and services

·         Introduction of affordable, retrofit solutions that can enhance lifestyles, safeguard homes and reduce home operating expenses

·         Manufacturers of appliances and home systems desire to differentiate their offerings and expand their opportunities

·         Government incentives and mandates to reduce energy consumption by connecting residential customers to advanced electricity distribution and management systems

 

In other words, some high value industry sectors are getting serious and see that many pieces of the smart home jigsaw are lying around waiting to be put into place. Key barriers remain, of course, not least persuading consumers that there is value in these systems and services. That’s a key set of questions which our new advisory service, Smart Home Strategies, will be exploring over the coming weeks and months.

 

David Mercer

 

Client Reading: Smart Homes: Why Now?