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News
Forrester Research: The State Of Consumer Technology
Adoption Survey Of More Than 68,000 Households Reveals How Consumers
Adopt And Use Technology (12/8/2005)
In the largest, longest-running survey of
its kind, Forrester Research, Inc. (Nasdaq: FORR) asked more than
68,000 North American households how they think about, adopt, and
use technology. The resulting report, "The State Of Consumers And
Technology: Benchmark 2005," combined with data from the seven previous
years, provides a comprehensive view of technology's role in consumers'
lives.
With more than 600 data points and 347 consumer
brands across 12 industries, the study shows that the adoption of
consumer electronics and Internet access will continue to see significant
growth through the end of the decade. By 2010, 62 percent of US
households will have broadband access to the Internet, 53 percent
will own a laptop, and 37 percent will use a digital video recorder
(DVR) to gain control over how and when they watch TV.
Forrester's methodology reveals that consumers'
attitudes toward technology - are they optimistic or pessimistic?
- determine much about how they incorporate technology into their
daily lives.
"The rise of consumers' adoption of personal
devices, home networking, and broadband, combined with the increasing
importance of the Internet in media, retail, banking, and healthcare,
means that every consumer-facing industry must better understand
the intricacies of technology adoption and use," says Forrester
Research Vice President Ted Schadler. "Missing from most marketers'
toolboxes is an understanding that consumers' attitudes toward technology
determine a lot about how they receive marketing messages, get service
online, adopt new technologies, and spend their time."
The report includes data in categories like
devices, media, telecommunications, retail, finance, healthcare,
and government. Sample data points include:
Device, Broadband, And Home Network Adoption
* Twenty-nine percent of North American households
connected to the Internet using broadband connections in 2004, up
from 19 percent in 2003. * Broadband access will more than double
this decade, reaching 71 million US households in 2010. This growth
will be spurred by providers like SBC and Comcast, which target
tech pessimists with lower prices, better in-home support, and a
clearer statement of benefits. * Only 8.8 percent of US households
have a home network today, dominated by households with multiple
PCs and broadband access to the Internet. Benefits like surfing
the Internet while watching TV, shopping in the kitchen, and listening
to digital music in the living room will drive home networking adoption
to 46.5 million households by 2010. * Last year, MP3 player adoption
more than doubled to 10.8 million of US households; 15 million US
households bought digital cameras; and 8 million households purchased
laptops.
Media Consumption And Online Behavior
* Today, only 6 percent of online consumers
read blogs and 2 percent use RSS, while 70 percent of online consumers
use the Internet to research products for purchase. Marketers should
focus on identifying the early-adopting tech optimists who read
blogs to tap effective viral marketing opportunities. * Households
with a laptop and home network watch three fewer hours of TV per
week and read the paper an hour less per week than offline households
do.
Banking And Shopping
* In the past three months, 43 percent of
US online households banked online, 41 percent checked their account
balances online, and 24 percent transferred balances online. * In
2004, 39.5 million US households shopped online - 3.5 million more
than in 2003. Broadband, laptop, and home networking adoption will
help drive online research and purchasing to more than 55 million
households by 2010.
Table Of Contents Of The Report
* The Five-Year Forecast For Devices And
Access * Technology Attitude Determines Technology's Role * Broadband
Moves Further Into The Mainstream * Home Networks Fuel Digital Home
Activities * Online Activities: Broadband Changes The Mix * The
PC Market: Broadband Drives PC Entertainment * 2004 Was A Banner
Year For Device Adoption * Digital Cable And Satellite TV Fight
For Share * Wireless: Mobile Data Services Catch On * Telecommunications:
Wireless Replaces Local Lines * Media: Nomadic Networkers Watch
Less TV * Search Marketing Reaches Broadband Households * Finance:
Online Transactions Are Still Cutting-Edge * Retail: Online Shopping
Continues To Grow * Auto And Travel: Tech Optimism Goes With Luxury
* Healthcare: Tech Optimists Get More Help Online * eGovernment
And Public Policy: The Digital Divide * Technology And The Canadian
Consumer
"The State Of Consumers And Technology: Benchmark
2005," Forrester's annual Consumer Technographics(r) North American
Benchmark Study, is a survey of 68,664 North American households.
www.forrester.com
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