Providing market intelligence for more than 35 years

In The News

Holidays Will Be Kind To Devices, Gadgets

According to a survey of 2,500 U.S. households, average spending on consumer electronics will be $1,058 this year -- up from $793 spent last year, according to Parks Associates. Among the respondents, nearly two-thirds (63%) planned to make a CE purchase this holiday season, almost double the percentage that said they planned to make them last year (37%). The hottest items: tablets and smartphones.

“It’s certainly an encouraging sign that you’ve got so many people planning to buy consumer electronics,” John Barrett, director, consumer analytics at Parks Associates, tells Marketing Daily. “Overall, the consumer confidence index isn’t so robust. But in the CE space, things are picking up.”

Among all consumers, 26% said they intend to spend more on electronics -- the highest rate since 2008, Barrett says. And for the first time, more U.S. households plan to purchase a tablet than a laptop, netbook or Ultrabook computer, he says. It’s still too early to call the demise of the desktop computer, Barrett says, but the early signs point to consumer attraction of the portability of laptops and tablets as their main computing devices.

“There are early indications that we’re starting to see a shift to where instead of a household having a combination of desktops and laptops, we’re transitioning to a combination of laptops and tablets,” Barrett says. “There are some indications that desktops are [being viewed as] more expendable, and that a tablet is a nice way to complement a laptop computer.”

In addition, consumers are showing stronger intentions to purchase their devices online (47% of tablet shoppers said they’d purchase online, compared with 35% last year). While this may mean increased showrooming and price comparisons in stores, consumers are also showing a preference for the online storefronts of traditional brick-and-mortar retailers.

“There’s certainly a showrooming phenomenon going on,” Barrett says. “But the retail chains still play an important role. I think [their role] may be shifting though, as more of the buying goes online. Is the store just a distribution point, or is it a showroom? And yes -- you can pick up [a product there], but it serves a more interactive and informative role. It will be interesting to see how that phenomenon plays out.”

From the article, "Holidays Will Be Kind To Devices, Gadgets" by Aaron Baar. 

Previously In The News

Digital Advertising Alliance Unveils Mobile Privacy Options

The mobile privacy program will be enforced by the DAA’s independent accountability partners, the Council of Better Business Bureaus and the Direct Marketing Association. Of course, while the D...

2015 When Real Cord-Cutting Effects Kick In, Report Says

But this report is a nice bookend to another one from Parks Associates, “Consumer Segmentation: OTT Video Buyers” that concludes 17% of current broadband subscribers in the U.S. will purchase the n...

UPDATING: 'HBO Now' The Big Test For Cord-Cutters?

So what happens now? According to January research from Parks Associates, half of the people who say they are interested in the new HBO service will drop their pay-TV subscriptions altogether,...

Netflix To Grow Fourfold From 2010 to 2020

55% of broadband households now subscribe to an OTT service, according to new figures from Parks Associates, reports Marketing Charts. And, a recent forecast from Digital TV Research predicts that...