Consumers Prefer Mobile Devices Over PCs for Media and Entertainment, According to ForeSee
iTunes on Top; HBO GO and Netflix Outperform Amazon's Offering; NBC News and Fox News Offer the Best in News; FOX Sports Beats ESPN on Mobile
ANN ARBOR, Mich., Aug. 6, 2013 /PRNewswire/ -- Customers prefer consuming media and entertainment websites and apps via mobile devices over personal computers, according to new research from customer experience analytics firm ForeSee. User satisfaction with mobile media and entertainment sites and apps scores 77 on the study's 100-point scale. Satisfaction with media and entertainment websites via PC scored 67 in a similar study conducted in April, 2013. Released today, ForeSee's Mobile Satisfaction Index: Media and Entertainment Edition highlights 22 top U.S. streaming video, sports and news companies.
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ForeSee produced the Mobile Satisfaction Index for retail (78), travel (77), and financial services (77), in addition to the media and entertainment edition. No industry has demonstrated exceptional customer experience in the mobile environment, though each industry has its stronger performers.
"With the fast pace of consumer adoption of smartphones and tablets, companies need to recognize the mobile platform is at least as important as the desktop web environment," said Larry Freed, president and CEO of ForeSee. "These mobile benchmark scores suggest there is much work to be done. Companies see the opportunity and they are trying to move fast, but they must be sure to do things the right way to meet the expectations of customers or risk turning them away to competitors."
Streaming TV and Movies
Streaming media is growing, and the streaming TV and movies category is the best scoring category at 78. Apple's iTunes scores the highest of any measured company in the study, using a slightly different model than its streaming counterparts to secure a score of 80. iTunes customers download content before viewing, setting the service apart from its true streaming competitors.
Netflix, which has been transforming itself from a DVD delivery company to a streaming media and content development powerhouse, ties HBO GO at 79 and has nearly as many subscribers as HBO. Amazon's streaming service isn't as successful as its online retail operation. Amazon Instant Video registers 78, while Hulu Plus and Crackle lag further behind at 75.
"Netflix may be the most disruptive and innovative company in the space. It is making major infrastructure investments so it can deliver high quality video to any customer, anywhere, on any device. The company knows that it's only as good as the content it can deliver, so Netflix goes a step further and into HBO's turf to develop quality original content worthy of Emmy nominations," said Eric Feinberg, Senior Director of Mobile, Media and Entertainment. "Amazon is dipping its toes into the water by offering Instant Video to its Prime members. Amazon is what Netflix used to be."
While premium content is a significant factor in customer satisfaction, performance is the key. Users want fast page loads and are dissatisfied when error messages or playback issues occur. iTunes' position on top makes sense, given that it bypasses these performance issues. The study finds that performance is the main driver of satisfaction for streaming websites and apps. Consumers are most satisfied when accessing content with their home Wi-Fi connection (78), and least satisfied when using streaming media on public Wi-Fi (73).
Streaming TV and Movies |
Satisfaction |
Average |
78 |
iTunes |
80 |
HBO GO |
79 |
Netflix |
79 |
Amazon Instant Video |
78 |
Crackle |
75 |
Hulu Plus |
75 |
Sports
Sports mobile sites and apps score 77 in aggregate, with scores as low as 74 and as high as 79. Though ESPN is often considered the leader in sports coverage, it is in a three-way tie for second with Sports Illustrated and Bleacher Report, scoring 77. Fox Sports leads the category at 79.
"ESPN is the 800-pound gorilla of sports coverage, but customers complain that there are too many mobile choices in where to connect, too many mobile sites and apps. Fox Sports, on the other hand, has plenty of marketing muscle especially with the impending launch of Fox Sports 1, and a more unified mobile strategy, offering a more focused app strategy," said Feinberg.
The most satisfied group in the sports category is comprised of customers who reported to frequently view ads, registering 81 in satisfaction. Twenty-three percent of sports mobile sites and apps users surveyed fall into this group, the highest among the three media and entertainment categories.
Sports |
Satisfaction |
Average |
77 |
Fox Sports |
79 |
Bleacher Report |
77 |
ESPN |
77 |
Sports Illustrated |
77 |
CBS Sports |
75 |
Yahoo! Sports |
74 |
News
Satisfaction with the mobile sites and apps for news organizations scores 77 to match the aggregate score for Media and Entertainment. Fox News and NBC News tie for first at 79, followed by four news entities at 78. Satisfaction with mobile news sites represents the largest spread of scores of all three categories measured in the study, with CBS News scoring the lowest at 73. Trust seems to be a factor when it comes to user satisfaction. According to the study, only 20% of those surveyed strongly agree they could trust the content on the news mobile site or app they visited.
News |
Satisfaction |
Average |
77 |
Fox News |
79 |
NBC News |
79 |
Google News |
78 |
Reuters |
78 |
USA Today |
78 |
Wall Street Journal |
78 |
CNN.com |
76 |
ABC News |
74 |
Yahoo! News |
74 |
CBS News |
73 |
Other Key Findings
- Satisfaction matters: Satisfied users of mobile news, sports and streaming TV and movie sites and apps report they are 80% more likely to use the mobile channel as a primary resource, 72% more likely to give positive recommendations, and 58% more likely to use the mobile channel again.
- How mobile is mobile?: More than half (52%) of those surveyed are accessing news, sports, and streaming mobile sites and apps from home, as opposed to only 9% who do so exclusively on the go.
- Seeing Stars isn't Satisfaction: App store ratings for the measured sites do not always match scientifically calculated satisfaction scores.
- Mobile preferences: 65% of those surveyed reported using a smartphone for their last mobile media and entertainment experience, compared to 35% who did so on a tablet.
- Apps over Mobile Sites: More survey respondents used mobile sites (66%) than apps (34%), but app users are generally more satisfied (78 vs. 76).
The index was conducted through a consumer panel of more than 5,500 surveys collected during the first half of June. The full report includes more user behaviors, factors affecting customer satisfaction, and other data. It can be downloaded for free at www.ForeSee.com.
About ForeSee
As a pioneer in customer experience analytics, ForeSee continuously measures satisfaction across customer touch points and delivers critical insights on where to prioritize improvements for maximum impact. Because ForeSee's superior technology and proven methodology connect the customer experience to the bottom line, executives and managers are able to drive future success by confidently optimizing the efforts that will achieve business and brand objectives. The result is better business for companies and a better experience for consumers. Visit us at www.foresee.com for customer experience solutions and original research.
FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Sarah Allen-Short, 734-327-3852
[email protected]
SOURCE ForeSee
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