Providing market intelligence for more than 35 years

In The News

Mobile Wallets & Passing 100 Million Users

Twenty percent of all smartphone owners already used at least one mobile location service or mobile wallet in 2013, according to the Parks Associates study Transforming Commerce: Mobile Wallets and LBS.

More significantly, the study suggests that usage will increase to about 113 million, or 43% of all smartphone owners within three years.

The research shows that almost half of all holiday consumer electronics shoppers in 2013 expected to use their smartphones while shopping. Among them, more than a third (35%) planned to use their smartphones to look up product information, while almost a third (31%) planned to use mobile apps for shopping.

“We saw mobile apps and social media play an increasingly important role in holiday shopping, with almost one two holiday CE shoppers using their smartphones as part of the shopping process," said Jennifer Kent, senior analyst at Parks Associates. She said that more than a third (38%) of shoppers who planned to spend $1,000 or more were using mobile apps for holiday shopping.

From the article, "Mobile Wallets & Passing 100 Million Users" by Chuck Martin.

Previously In The News

Consumers Concerned About IoT Data, Privacy

The companies behind the growing Internet of Things may have to do a little consumer massaging (and messaging) to allay some deep concerns before their products can reach heavy adoption. Nearly...

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...

Fitbit Holds Lead Among Fitness Wearables

Good luck catching up with Fitbit in the wearable fitness tracker category. According to new research from Parks Associates, Fitbit commands nearly 40% of the digital fitness tracker market, fa...

Digital Video Views On Rise

Digital TV-video viewing continues to climb -- but it's still way behind traditional TV consumption. Parks Associates says U.S. broadband households spend on average 1.3 hours per week watching...