Sunday, April 29, 2007

Read Next Article in Personal Tech
Please note that this material is copyright protected. It is illegal to display or reproduce this article without permission for any commercial purpose, including use as marketing or public relations literature. To obtain reprints of this article for authorized use, please call a sales representative at (818) 461-9700 or visit http://www.ectnews.com/about/reprints/.
Finnish Study Indicates Users Willing to Pay for Mobile TV
Print Version
E-Mail Article
Digg It
Reprints

By Jennifer LeClaire
TechNewsWorld
08/31/05 9:05 AM PT

In general, mobile TV users spent approximately 20 minutes a day watching mobile TV, although more active users watched between 30 to 40 minutes per session. Participants also watched mobile TV at different times than traditional TV peak hours.


Free Security Software
Get the tools you need to stop adware and viruses from these expert resources.

In what appears to be clear evidence that the digital revolution is ready for takeoff, results from a commercial mobile TV pilot in Helsinki, Finland, reveal consumers are willing to pay for services.

Specifically, 41 percent of pilot participants said they would be willing to purchase mobile TV services, according to the study, and half thought a fixed monthly fee of 10 euros was a reasonable price to pay. Over half (58 percent) said that they believed broadcast mobile TV services would be popular.
Willing to Pay

Nokia, Digita, Elisa, MTV, Channel Four Finland (Nelonen), TeliaSonera Finland and YLE jointly conducted the pilot in Finland between March and June 2005 with 500 users accessing mobile TV using the Nokia 7710 smartphone and DVB-H technology.

Phil Leigh, senior analyst with Inside Digital Media, told TechNewsWorld that he is surprised by the high percentage of pilot participants who said they would pay for mobile TV.

"We are going to see mobile TV deployed, but for the mass market it's not around the corner," said Leigh, noting that the screen sizes on mobile devices are still the largest barrier to adoption. "It's going to continue to be early adopters."
Content Still King

According to the pilot results, participants not only wanted to watch familiar program offerings, but would also welcome mobile TV content that is suitable for short and occasional viewing.

Familiar programs available through national Finnish television channels proved to be the most popular, followed by sports and news channels, like CNN, BBC World and Euronews.

In general, mobile TV users spent approximately 20 minutes a day watching mobile TV, although more active users watched between 30 to 40 minutes per session. Participants also watched mobile TV at different times than traditional TV peak hours.

"Mobile TV might be a way to catch up on the news, sporting events and time sensitive broadcasts that you have to absorb in real time, like the latest pictures from New Orleans and Mississippi," Leigh said. "Sporting events are another type of broadcast where people want to know the results immediately."
Pricing Models Explained

Overall, users preferred a fixed pricing model although many were also interested in a pay per view model. Leigh said carriers will probably establish a fixed monthly fee because that is the business model to which telephone companies are accustomed.

The pilot results also reveal the key requirements from consumers, including easy and intuitive service usability, good technical functionality and reliability Forge ahead and stay on budget with simple to install HP server technology., content that is also suitable for short period viewing, and mobile phone functions that are not compromised by the TV application.

"The Helsinki pilot reinforces our belief that mobile broadcast TV is a significant opportunity," said Richard Sharp, vice president of Rich Media for Nokia. "The message for the industry is clear: for mobile TV services to succeed we need relevant and compelling content, easy-to-use technology and reasonable and simple pricing plans. With these elements in place, consumer demand for mobile TV will follow."

Next Article in Personal Tech: Camera Phones: Digital Camera Boon or Buster?

Print Version E-Mail Article Digg It Reprints More by Jennifer LeClaire Talkback Related Stories RSS
Sponsored Links
Barracuda Web Filter
Raise employee productivity by reducing objectionable content. No per-server fees.
Free 20-Page Report
Who Leads in WLAN Security? Complements of Trapeze Networks and ABI Research .
HP
Forge ahead and stay on budget with simple to install HP server technology.
Email Marketing Software
ListManager software is robust, scalable, integrated. Demo today.
BlackBerry
Get the Facts on BlackBerry Business Solutions

Related Stories

* TV Experiments With Audio Podcasting (29-Aug-05)
* Intel, AMD Move Toward Mobile Battle (23-Aug-05)
* Coming to the Web: TV Commercials, With a Twist (17-Aug-05)
* AOL Launches Mobile Storefront (16-Aug-05)
* Opera to Launch Browser for Mobile Phones (10-Aug-05)

Don't miss a story -- sign up for our FREE e-mail newsletters and view the latest headlines at a glance.
Tech News Flash [ View Sample ]
E-Commerce Minute [ View Sample ]
ECT News Network Weekly Newsletter [ View Sample ]

More Stories by Jennifer LeClaire

* The Digital Car: Cool Automotive Accessories, Part 2 (16-Jan-07)
* 'World of Warcraft' Wows 8 Million Subscribers (12-Jan-07)
* AT&T Bids Goodbye to Cingular Brand (12-Jan-07)

[Search More...]
Letters: Click here to send a letter to the editor...
Talkback: Click here to add your comment about this story...
Shortcuts
> Sign Up for Business and Technology News Alerts
> Most Popular | Spotlight Features | Podcasts
> This Week on ECT News Network | Archives
> Careers at ECT News Network
> WiFi Hotspot Locator
Letters to the Editor
TechNewsWorld
> The Glee and Grief of Text Messaging
> As the Software World Turns, Part 1: Engineers In, Programmers Out
> Reality Bites OLPC With Price Jump
> Barbie's Fantasy World Expands to Virtual Dimension
> Hawking Flies Free in Zero-G Joyride
> iPods Need Doctors Too
> eBay: Redefining 'It' in More Ways Than One
> Sony: Remade in the USA
> Red Hat Gets Into Mischief
> Making Firefox Sound Pop
E-Commerce Times
> Veteran AT&T CEO to Hand Over Reins in June
> Spam Fighters Eye New Target in Fresh Legal Offensive
> Bill Could Rescue Net Radio from Oblivion
> Gaming Legend to Exit Sony as PS3 Stumbles
> Microsoft Cashes In on Vista in Q3
MacNewsWorld
> Will Backdating Accusations Upset the Apple Cart?
> When it Comes to Spin Doctoring, Apple Has a PhD
> Apple Blows Past Bullish Q2 Expectations
> Google Desktop for Mac Adds Wattage to Spotlight
> QuickTime Java Flaw Rated 'Highly Critical'
CRM Buyer
> Outsourcing's Next Wave
> WaMu Courts Mortgage Customers With Reset Option
> Outsourcing, Part 2: Uncovering the Hidden Costs
> Affinium 7.3 Lets Marketers Define Objects for Reuse
> Outsourcing, Part 1: Is Resistance Futile?
LinuxInsider
> New SourceLabs App Aims to Make Open Source Safe
> Firefox Add-On Helps Create New Generation of 'Widows'
> OpenDNS Unveils Browsing 'Shortcuts'
> Adobe Makes Bold Foray Into Open Source Territory
> The Truth About Open Source Security
White Papers | Case Studies | Reports
Free Downloads
Free 20-Page Report. Who Leads in WLAN Security? Complements of Trapeze Networks and ABI Research.
Free White Paper: Executive Guide to Enterprise eBusiness Success
Section Snapshot
Commentary

* Gubb App Offers a Long List of Nice Features
* Olympus Voice Recorder Sports Sweet Trimmings
* Lots of Features Lend Appeal to the Motorola Q


Developer

* SANS to Offer Certification for Security Software Programmers
* Linux Community Offers Free Drivers to Hardware Firms
* New Consulting Firm to Advise Mac Developers


ECT News Exclusives

* McAfee CSO Martin Carmichael: When Security and Business Lock Horns
* MindTouch CEO Ken Liu: Adding a Wiki Twist to Business Sites
* TraceSecurity CTO Jim Stickley: Robbing Banks With Impunity

Hardware

* AMD Plans $1.8B Debt Sale Bailout
* Via Shrinks Motherboard to Playing Card Size
* Intel Promises More Speed, Efficiency, Power in Tinier Chips


Internet

* Web 2.0: A Marketer's Dream
* MySpace and Burnett: Politics Is About to Get Real
* Web 2.0, Part 2: Serious Business Tool or Silly Waste of Time?


Networks

* Comcast Profit Soars on Triple Play Success
* Vonage Gets Breathing Room Pending Appeal
* AT&T Riding High on Merger, Wireless Revenues

Open Source

* Terra Soft CEO Kai Staats: Rallying Around the Cell Processor and Power Architecture
* Debian's Ian Speaks: Gaining Developer Mindshare Is Key
* Ubuntu Feisty Fawn Leaps to Desktops and Servers


Personal Tech

* PS3 Chip to Give Mainframes Second Life
* Your PS3 Is Watching You
* Nintendo Flies High on Strong Wii, DS Sales


Science

* Revolutionary Genetic Research IDs Diabetes Genes
* Hawking Ready to Take Zero-G Plunge
* Far-Flung Planet Looks a Lot Like Home

Security

* Farmer Discovers USDA Data Leak
* Google Privacy Flap Spreads to EU
* Privacy Advocates Cry Foul Over Google, DoubleClick Deal


Software

* Wikipedia Without the Web
* IBM Beta Paves the Way for Linux on System P Servers
* Gates All Smiles During Free Software Outburst


Space

* 3-D Images to Illuminate Sun's Secrets
* India Takes Space Program Commercial With Sat Launch
* Billionaire Gets Down to Earth as Dream Space Tour Ends

Spotlight Features

* Web 2.0 Mashups and the Oracle-Hyperion Deal
* Salespeople and Telecommuters and Customers, Oh My
* The Greening of Technology


VoIP

* Vonage Warns It May Go Bankrupt
* Vonage Tells Two Different Workaround Stories
* Vonage Chief Resigns as Company Struggles to Stay Afloat


Wireless

* Mobile Enterprise Tools, Part 2: The Roadside Desktop
* New BlackBerry Lets Sprint, Verizon Users Go Global
* Are Data Leaks Bleeding Your Company Dry?

ECT News Network Information
Publications

* E-Commerce Times
* TechNewsWorld
* LinuxInsider
* CRM Buyer
* MacNewsWorld

Free Newsletters

* E-Commerce Minute
* Tech News Flash
* ECT News Network Weekly Newsletter
* Newsletter Sign Up


Locate Products and Services

* E-Business Info Center
* IT Resources
* Open Source Technology
* CRM Solutions Center

Corporate

* About
* Careers [NOW HIRING]
* Contact Us
* Business Development
* Permissions
* Reprint Information
* How To Advertise


Reader Services

* Account Management
* Become an Affiliate
* Discussion
* Letters to the Editor
* Linking Policy
* RSS / XML Headline Feeds
* Search ECT News Network
* News Alerts [NEW]

ECT News Network
Copyright © 1998-2007 ECT News Network, Inc. All Rights Reserved. See Terms