Parks Associates: 24% of US Broadband Households With Fixed Broadband Service Likely to Upgrade in the Next Six Months
- New research addresses continuing impact of COVID-19 on broadband usage, CE product adoption, OTT service stacking, and churn rates
Parks Associates released a new Quantified Consumer study, COVID-19: Impact on Communications and Entertainment, which reveals that in 3Q 2020, more than 50% of US broadband households reported that their broadband usage has increased since the start of the COVID-19 crisis. While consumers report broadband performance is keeping pace with the increased demand, in Q3 2020, 24% of fixed broadband households reported plans to upgrade their speed in the next six months, compared to 18% in 2Q 2020.
Recommended AI News: Private LTE and 5G: Sprouting and Ready to Rise
“Broadband upgrade plans indicate many households see some COVID-19-related changes as permanent,” said Steve Nason, Research Director, Parks Associates. “For video services, OTT service stacking has been particularly pronounced, with 45% of US broadband households subscribing to three or more OTT services. Many consumers are planning to add new services such as Disney+, Apple TV+, HBO Max, and Peacock as a permanent part of their OTT service portfolio, beyond the traditional Big 3: Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, and Hulu.”
COVID-19: Impact on Communications and Entertainment examines the impact of COVID-19 on service providers and consumer adoption and satisfaction throughout the communications, consumer technology, and entertainment and home services sectors. The research reports COVID-19 continues to widen the OTT/pay-TV gap. As many across the US remain homebound, households are continually relying on video content to fill their time outside of work and school. Within video services, COVID-19 has accelerated the trend of video viewers accessing OTT offerings at much higher rates than a pay-TV service via a traditional or online provider.
Recommended AI News: NTT DOCOMO’s Ambitious New Eco Targets Validated by Science-Based Targets Initiative
“Many traditional pay-TV subscribers are migrating to online pay-TV offerings or standalone OTT services,” Nason said. “Traditional providers, who still comprise the majority of the pay-TV market, have to continually seek ways to integrate online video services into their offerings either through homegrown solutions or external partnerships.”
Recommended AI News: Accounts Payable Departments Lag in AI Automation, New Ephesoft Survey Finds
Scrap metal trading Ferrous material recycling equipment Iron disposal yard
Ferrous scrap handling, Iron scrap reclaiming plant, Metal waste reconstruction
Copper scrap recycling statistics Copper scrap recycling process Metal repurposing centers
Copper cable buyer, Metal reuse, Scrap copper valuation