Providing market intelligence for more than 35 years

Yahoo! Finance & News

Parks Associates addresses new bundled service strategies for service providers at ESX 2012

Parks Associates estimates 2011 revenue from connected home and security monitoring services at $9.4B and will grow to $13.8B by 2016. Tom Kerber, Director, Research, Home Controls & Energy, Parks Associates, will address this growing market, including opportunities, consumer demand, and future growth for bundled services at the Electronic Security Expo (ESX) on Tuesday, June 26th in Nashville, Tennessee.

ESX is the only major, national trade event focused purely on the needs of installation, integration, and monitoring companies. ESX offers business, product and market information and connections invaluable to these companies and focuses intensely on the growth and maintenance of their key asset – Recurring Monthly Revenue or RMR.

From the article, "Parks Associates addresses new bundled service strategies for service providers at ESX 2012."

Previously In The News

Surprise: Purchase intent polls show PS4 with a big lead over Xbox One

Two separate surveys are showing that the PlayStation 4 sits substantially ahead of Microsoft’s Xbox One when it comes to polling American consumers about console preference. According to Parks Ass...

Dolby Collaborates with Leading Hollywood Studios to Deliver High-Quality Audio for Digital Content

Dolby Laboratories, Inc. today announced that Twentieth Century Fox Home Entertainment and Anchor Bay Entertainment now encode movies and TV programs in the UltraViolet™Common File Format (CFF) usi...

NETGEAR Launches Ocuity Wireless IP Cameras, Best-in-Class Integrated Monitoring Solution for Security Systems Providers

The Ocuity 500 comes with a built-in rechargeable battery that supports two hours of streaming video, maintaining a complete video record even through power outages. Multiple power management modes...

Five Ways to Kick the Cable TV Habit and Save Serious Cash

Fewer than 5 percent of cable subscribers have cut the cord, according to research firm Parks Associates, but nearly all of them did it for the same reason: Their cable bills were too damned high....