Providing market intelligence for more than 35 years

In The News

65% Broadband Users Engage With Second-Screen

Digital media research from Parks Associates finds 65 per cent of US broadband households engage in at least one second-second screen activity on at least a monthly basis. The research finds the most common activity is to search for information about the programme being watched.

“Most consumers favour a passive second-screen experience that complements the already immersive first-screen experience versus the highly interactive apps that typified the first phase of second-screen solutions,” said Glenn Hower, Research Analyst, Parks Associates. “Second-screen users are more likely to engage in supplemental activities, like looking up information while they watch TV, as opposed to social media activities. These types of apps open new partnership opportunities among content providers, data aggregators, advertisers, and service providers.”

From the article "65% Broadband Users Engage With Second-Screen" by www.advanced-television.com

Previously In The News

Smart home devices may lure insureds to new insurers

A research study by Parks Associates evaluated insurance opportunities in smart homes and found that 33% of U.S. households with internet would switch their homeowners or renters insurance provider to...

Industry Voices: WISP industry 'hot as ever'

Parks Associates recently reported that 66% of subscribers that get fixed wireless from T-Mobile or Verizon consider their prices to be fair or good. “This compares to 51% of fiber subscribers and 35%...

Central Station Monitoring: A Complete Guide

That’s especially important based on Parks Associates research that shows half of security system owners say they deal with too many false alarms, and more than 60% of respondents say their systems tr...

VIDAA TV OS ready to compete against Roku, Amazon in US

Executives now want to replicate some of that success in the United States, though they know it will be a challenge: Roku and Amazon control 80% of the domestic streaming TV market with their budget s...