Consumers' Desire To Stream Video Content On TV Screens Will Drive Content Device Purchases, Council For Research Excellence Studies Suggest
For Video-Device Purchase and Viewing Decisions, Content is Dominant Consideration, Device Size Matters, and Children Have a Big Say
NEW YORK, Aug. 6, 2014 /PRNewswire/ -- The most important determining factor among consumers in purchasing a new TV or video device is the ability for it to connect to the Internet and stream content, a just-released study has found.
Smart TVs -- TV sets that connect to the Internet to access applications such as Netflix and Hulu Plus -- were selected by the majority of households participating in the qualitative study, an acceleration ethnography designed to help determine consumers' likely future video-device purchases, conducted for the Council for Research Excellence (CRE) by GfK.
The acceleration ethnography was conducted among 50 households in the Chicago area, which were tracked over a 15-week period from November 2013 to April 2014; members' online and in-store purchases were monitored via self-reporting, behavior and usage surveys, and follow-up questions based on incoming data.
Smart TVs were followed by TV-set-connectable over-the-top (OTT) streaming devices (such as a Roku box or Google Chromecast device), which were typically purchased alongside other devices such as smart TVs. Tablets were purchased by a minority of the households.
Researchers found that the dominant consideration driving video-device purchase and usage decisions was content, and that consumers demand devices that can stream content -- to enable time-shifting or binge-watching, for example. All participating households sought ways to stream content, regardless of demographic or technographic differences. Also, "casting" content from one device to another was a material attraction for participants.
When TV sets with OTT access were introduced into a household, they became the most-used device for video, generating increased group viewing. The TV set, whether "smart" or connected to a streaming device, remained the dominant video-viewing device, although other devices were often present in the same room.
The acceleration study ran concurrently with an ongoing, two-year longitudinal ethnography, also conducted for the CRE by GfK, involving a national selection of 100 households.
Among initial findings from the longitudinal study:
- Family and friends -- especially children, teenagers and "boomerang" young adults who have returned to parents' homes -- often act as influencers and agents of change, influencing not only technology purchasing decisions but which content is consumed;
- consumers have moved from a single-source, single-device "mental model" to a multi-source, multi-device model;
- a family is likely to watch together on a TV set on weeknights and then watch on laptops in their own rooms between 9 p.m. and 10 p.m.; and
- where, when and how content is consumed often are determined by negotiation among multiple household members -- although typically the father of the household plays the role of "manager" of the remote.
The longitudinal ethnography's 100 participant households were selected to represent a balance of urban, suburban and rural characteristics. Beginning in October 2013, researchers conducted in-person visits in homes specially selected for observation, with more scheduled for 2015.
All households for both studies were given a personal smart-device serving as a "participant toolkit" including a camera and co-discovery tool with study-specific apps to enable self-reporting.
"We learned that consumers want to watch content on the best available screen -- typically the screen known as the 'TV' most often found in the living room," said Bryon Schafer, who serves as chair of the CRE's Digital Research Committee and is senior vice president, Warner Bros. Media Research & Insights. "We also learned that kids in many ways are the gatekeepers due to their ability to grasp and advocate new viewing technologies."
"The term 'watching TV' has grown to mean the viewing of any long form content on any screen," added Laura Cowan, director, analytics and insight at MEC, who led the team conducting the acceleration study. "The program grid is continuing to diminish in importance as consumers adopt technologies that allow them to design their ideal viewing time and place."
A slide presentation of the findings can be found here.
About the Council for Research Excellence
The Council for Research Excellence (CRE) is an independent research group created in 2005 and funded by Nielsen. The CRE is dedicated to advancing the knowledge and practice of audience measurement methodology and comprises senior-level industry researchers representing advertisers, agencies, broadcast networks, cable, syndicators, local stations and industry associations.
CRE members represent advertising agencies, media-buying firms, media companies, advertisers, digital publishers, social media companies and industry organizations including ABC, AMC Networks, Assembly, CBS, Comcast, Cox Media Group, Discovery Communications, ESPN, Gannett Co., Greater Media, GroupM, Havas Media, Horizon Media, Katz Media Group, Kimberly-Clark, LIN Media, Magna Global, the Media Rating Council, MoffettNathanson LLC, the National Association of Broadcasters, NBC Universal, Nielsen, Omnicom Media Group, Radio Advertising Bureau, Raycom Media, Scripps Networks Interactive, Starcom MediaVest Group, Tribune Co., Turner Broadcasting, 21st Century Fox, Twitter, Universal McCann, Univision, Viacom Entertainment Group and Warner Bros. Television.
For more information about the Council for Research Excellence, please visit: http://www.researchexcellence.com/
SOURCE Council for Research Excellence
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