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Opinion "Communicate,
Collaborate, Innovate" |
| Issue:
33/08 |
AIMIA
Mobile Lifestyle Report
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August
27, 2008
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ATUG attended
the launch of AIMIA’s fourth edition of the
Australian Mobile Phone Lifestyle Index, a collaborative industry
research project carried out during April 2008 by:
The aim of the research is to better inform mobile application developers,
content aggregators, content owners, mobile telecommunication companies,
handset manufacturers, analysts and other industry partners about
the current Australian mobile content market and key longitudinal
trends.
As well as the core questions, the special topic of this survey
was Communities and User-generated Content on the mobile phone.
This project
is the only independent and open study of the market that has been
carried out with the support of major industry partners.
An online survey was completed by 2,097 respondents. Key findings
are summarised below. Further detail can be found in the full report
Participants
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• Age
ranged from 10 to 78 years of age, average age, 35 years.
• Gender: 69% female, 31% male.
• 35% from NSW, 24% from VIC, 18% from QLD, 23% rest of Australia.
• Residential status: 45% single, with most living independently, 37% married,
and 18% in a couple but not married.
• Income: The top three weekly income bands were <$50/week (10%), $201–$300/week
(9%), and $1,000–$1,500/week (11%).
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Mobile Phones
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• 49%
owned a mobile phone for over seven years.
• 34% of participants noted that they owned a second mobile phone and/or
SIM, with over half of these aged 22–40 years old and 62% female.
• Telecommunications provider: Optus (35%) and Telstra (25%) were in the
same positions as the last survey and were still the dominant telecommunications
providers with the participants of this survey. Vodafone (16%) just took the
third spot back from 3 (15%).
• 26% of survey respondents noted that they would prefer to be with a different
telecommunications provider.
• Bill payment: Nearly 85% paid their own mobile phone bill.
• There was a significant increase in the number of respondents who were
on prepaid (41%) while the remaining 58% had a monthly bill. Once again, the
younger demographic tends to have prepaid, with the majority of over 25 year
olds on a monthly plan.
• 65% were on capped plans, another significant increase from the previous
survey.
• Monthly spend: 70% spent <$60, 19% spent $21–$31, and 14% of
respondents spent more than $100 per month on their mobile phone bill.
• Brand: 47% of participants currently own a Nokia mobile phone (same as
last year), followed by Motorola and Sony Ericsson (equal with 12%), with Samsung
getting closer in third place with 11%.
• 25% of respondents stated that their phone was 3G, down from 30% last
year. However, more people didn’t know if they had a 3G phone or not (20%)
than in Survey 3 (11%).
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Mobile Phone Use
Use of mobile phone by monthly phone bill spend:
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• Most
participants identified voice (84%) and SMS (84%) as key
expenditure items on their monthly phone bill, followed by
MMS (22%), buying content (9%), and email (7%).
• 9% of respondents that did not buy content via their phone bill purchased
content through an alternative channel, e.g., credit card statement.
• There was a slight decline in buying content compared to previous surveys,
while there appears to be some services like MMS and email where customers are
seeing value in spending additional dollars.
• The decline in buying content monthly should be interpreted with caution
as it may be a reflection of the increasing amount of free content available,
and increasing familiarity with technologies like Bluetooth that allow the free
transfer of content between mobile phone users.
• 73% used their mobile phone mainly or exclusively for personal use.
• Voice and SMS dominate as the key methods of communication across all
groups.
• SMS and MMS are most popular as a means of communicating with family
and friends.
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Current
Content Purchasing And Information Accessing Behaviour In The
Last 12 Months
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• Overall,
50% of respondents had purchased and/or subscribed to information
services in the last 12 months. The current figure is still
surprisingly high, especially given that, as explained previously,
the increased amount of content that can be accessed for
free and the change in billing options make it more difficult
to assign direct costs to content and information.
• 36% of participants stated that they had purchased or subscribed to information
services on their mobile phone, while 33% of respondents stated that they purchased
mobile content in the last 12 months.
• More than 50% of participants became aware of new mobile content via
the Internet, then close friends, on the phone menu, and via TV.
• 48% of participants purchased content via the Internet from a PC, 17%
via the carrier’s portal, and 12% from the mobile phone menu.
• Of those that became aware of the content via the mobile phone, 3 had
the highest rate of customers (31%), followed by Optus (25%) and Telstra (25%)
in equal second. However, Telstra’s customers were more likely to become
aware of new content via marketing from the telephone company (31%), followed
by Optus (29%).
• The top three content types purchased were games (43%), true tones (42%)
and wallpapers (33%).
• Digital music downloads continue to rapidly grow. In the last 2 years,
the proportion of respondents who have purchased digital content downloads has
increased by 113%. Other growth areas in the last 2 years were true tones (173%
growth) and games (171% growth).
• Digital music downloads was again ranked first with an average of 9 downloads
in the last 12 months. SMS alerts also ranked high with a mean of 8 SMS alerts.
• Compared to the number of units purchased in Survey 3, SMS alerts increased
by 60%, games 50%, and digital content downloads 29%.
• Respondents on the 3 and Virgin networks were most likely to purchase
mobile content, Telstra customers were more likely not to.
• While gender didn’t predict content purchasing, those on capped
plans were more likely to purchase content.
• Although news (53%), weather (50%) and sport (34%) continue to dominate
the information accessed over the last 12 months, there has been an increase
in the percentage of respondents using almost all types of information. The greatest
growth since Survey 3 has occurred in maps (347%), restaurant/café guides
and reviews (174%), and TV listings (93%).
• Respondents on the 3 and Vodafone networks were most likely to use information
services, those on Optus, Virgin or ‘Other’ were less likely.
• A higher proportion of respondents from the 26–40-year-old age
group accessed more information on mobile phones than other groups.
• Of the 70% of respondents who said that they don’t use their mobile
for anything but SMS and voice calls, 60% said that they don’t care and
just want to use it as a phone. 7% didn’t know how to access content, 11%
didn’t know how to connect to the Internet on their phone, and 14% don’t
know what the internet does. 26% of people said that they don’t get value
out of information or content on their mobile phone.
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Expected Future Usage
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• The
most popular requests for future mobile content were digital
music downloads (30%), games (27%) and wallpapers (25%).
• The most popular requests for future mobile information were maps (31%),
news (29%) and weather content (28%).
• Again, SMS (62%) was the most desired application for future use, email
(49%) came second, and then MMS (42%)
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Communities And User-Generated Content (UGC)
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Communities
on the PC
• 83% of respondents stated that they used at least one of the listed online
communities on their PC.
• MSN Messenger was the most popular computer community (46%), followed
by YouTube (45%) and Facebook (28%).
Communities
on the Mobile Phone
• In almost an exact reverse of the above, only 16% of respondents stated
that they used at least one of the listed online communities on their mobile
phone.
• MSN Messenger was again the most popular mobile community (8%), followed
by Facebook (5%) and MySpace (3%).
Creating
and Sharing Content for the Mobile Phone
• 33%
of respondents said that they had created content on their
mobile phones to share with others. 96% shared photos, 41%
shared videos and 32% shared music.
• MMS (63%) and Bluetooth (61%) were the main methods of sharing content.
• 50% said that they share content once a month or more often.
• 55% of respondents said that they had used content on their mobile phone
created by others. 90% had viewed photos, 49% music and 32% video. Those under
25 years old were more likely to have created content to share with others. |
A few highlights for ATUG
Most participants
identified voice (84%) and SMS (84%) as key expenditure items on
their monthly
phone bill, followed by MMS (22%), buying
content (9%), and email (7%) – communications is still king!
65% of respondents
were on capped plans, a significant increase from the previous
survey,
with monthly spend at 70% spending <$60,
19% spending $21–$31, and 14% spending more than $100 per month
on their mobile phone bill. Those on capped plans were more likely
to purchase content – certainty matters!
The top three
content types purchased were games (43%), true tones (42%) and
wallpapers
(33%). Digital music downloads continue to rapidly
grow. In the last 2 years, the proportion of respondents who have
purchased digital content downloads has increased by 113%. A higher
proportion of respondents from the 26–40-year-old age group
accessed more information on mobile phones than the other groups – it’s
age related!
** Details
for coming events will be forwarded via normal notice/event channels.
***This email has
been sent from: Patrick
Sinclair, Australian Telecommunications Users
Group, Suite 506, Level 5, 815 Pacific Hwy Chatswood
NSW 2067 |
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