Providing market intelligence for more than 35 years

In The News

Women More Into Connectivity Than Men

According to research from Parks Associates, women are 73% more likely than men to have watched a full-length TV show online over the past 30 days.

The research firm also found that women have higher purchase intentions than men for popular consumer electronics devices (such as a fifth of women who said they planned to purchase a laptop or smartphone). Shortly after buying the product, women quickly integrated it into all aspects of their daily lives. “Once they get a product, which typically they may purchase for pragmatic and useful reasons, they will take advantage of all the applications of that product,” Parks says.

In addition, women are 40% more likely to play games on Facebook, are the majority of players on the Wii system and are nearly equal to the percentage of men who play games on the Xbox 360 and Sony’s PS3, although they tend to play different kinds of games –- social-based, for instance -– than men and boys, who are more into war and fantasy games. “We are not saying that women are taking on that role [of hardcore gamer],” Parks says. “Teenage boys still have a lot of time on their hands and enjoy immersion in those worlds.”

In order to be successful in the segment, Parks says, consumer electronics companies need to spend more time targeting and giving women practical reasons to buy specific devices (such as an easier ability to maintain a social network or an ease of watching entertainment), and let the usage patterns follow.

“Women actually buy more electronics than men,” Parks says. “That, in a way, is not surprising -- since women continue to have the role of shopping in the household, which could include electronics. [But] the view that men will be dominant just no longer holds.”

From the article, "Women More Into Connectivity Than Men" by Aaron Baar

Previously In The News

Dongle Bells: The Holiday Stream Of Streaming Devices

If predictions from Parks Associates are correct, this should be a good season for connected devices like Chromecast, Amazon Fire TV and Roku. That's mainly because they’re cheap and small and, if...

Some New Data Emphasizes The Drift To OTT Viewing

Parks Associates today said the amount of online video seen via a TV screen went up to 3 hours per week in the first quarter of this year, up from 2.3 hours in the same quarter in 2013. Matching up...

Marketers: Time To Go 'Over The Top' With Video?

New investments in OTT and recent consolidations in the space seem to show that OTT technology is here to stay. In fact, new research from Parks Associates here shows that OTT video adoption is inc...

Streaming Media Device Use In Broadband Homes Hits 20%

Although initially a hot seller, Google Chromecast usage has cooled somewhat -- partly because of a hotly competitive market overall for Internet-connected TV devices. Parks Associates says new...