The document summarizes key findings from Nielsen's Q1 2011 Cross-Platform Report on trends in American video consumption across traditional TV, mobile devices, and the internet. Some of the main points include:
- Americans are spending more time overall watching video content, with a 22 minute per month increase in traditional TV viewing. Mobile and internet video viewing also saw large increases.
- Younger demographics and Asians spend more time watching internet video, while older groups spend more time with traditional TV. Hispanics watch less TV but more mobile/internet video than other groups.
- Over two-thirds of TV homes now have HDTV, while under half have a video game console or DVR
Estudio elaborado por Nielsen en el que se analizan los hábitos de consumo de contenidos audiovisuales de los estadounidenses durante el último trimestre de 2011. (inglés)
Estudio elaborado por Nielsen en el que se analizan los hábitos de consumo de contenidos audiovisuales de los estadounidenses durante el último trimestre de 2011. (inglés)
Microsoft study of the European trends of Internet usage and what this means for the future of the Internet and other media.
Extract:
Since 2004, broadband connections across Europe have grown by almost 95%, from 44 million households in 2005 to over 85 million1. In fact, broadband Internet connections in Europe today outstrip those in the US, representing 83% of all Internet connections, compared to 70% in America1. The explosion in broadband uptake combined with the relentless pace of technological innovation is driving a major change in consumer behaviour and is transforming our traditional media landscape. In this report, Microsoft analyses the differences in broadband penetration levels across Europe, examines the causes fuelling the growth of Internet adoption, assesses the impact of consumers’ evolving online behavior, and predicts the online trends of the future.
Taking the whole picture into account, this report finds that the United States has made rapid progress in broadband deployment, performance, and price, as well as adoption when measured as computer-owning households who subscribe to broadband. Considering the high cost of operating and upgrading broadband networks in a largely suburban nation, the prices Americans pay for broadband services are reasonable and the performance of our networks is better than in all but a handful of nations that have densely populated urban areas and have used government subsidies to leap-frog several generations of technology ahead of where the market would go on its own in response to changing consumer demands. All in all, the state of American broadband is good and getting better, but there is still room for improvement in selected areas.
Nielsen’s Digital Transition Tracker provides a comprehensive view of the home entertainment category, which includes any paid format used to access TV and movie content at home or on a mobile device, such as DVDs or Blu-ray discs, digital rentals, Pay Per View, or subscription streaming. The report looks at findings among the general U.S. population and measures the overall size of the category over time for both TV and movies.
Courtesy of: Nielsen
This TV Trends Report is packed full of facts and figures about the television industry. For more information, visit thinktv.com.au or follow us @Think_TV
THE NIELSEN TOTAL AUDIENCE REPORT: Q2 2016Filipp Paster
The Nielsen Total Audience Report is designed to enable the industry to track changes in media usage. We have consistently reported that overall usage has increased–that a major effect of new devices and services is additive to consumer’s total time spent with media. We have also shown how usage of individual devices and platforms has changed over time as the media landscape continues to evolve.
This iteration of the Nielsen Total Audience Report focuses on the media channel choices within the many different platforms consumers have at their disposal and the amount they routinely turn to.
Microsoft study of the European trends of Internet usage and what this means for the future of the Internet and other media.
Extract:
Since 2004, broadband connections across Europe have grown by almost 95%, from 44 million households in 2005 to over 85 million1. In fact, broadband Internet connections in Europe today outstrip those in the US, representing 83% of all Internet connections, compared to 70% in America1. The explosion in broadband uptake combined with the relentless pace of technological innovation is driving a major change in consumer behaviour and is transforming our traditional media landscape. In this report, Microsoft analyses the differences in broadband penetration levels across Europe, examines the causes fuelling the growth of Internet adoption, assesses the impact of consumers’ evolving online behavior, and predicts the online trends of the future.
Taking the whole picture into account, this report finds that the United States has made rapid progress in broadband deployment, performance, and price, as well as adoption when measured as computer-owning households who subscribe to broadband. Considering the high cost of operating and upgrading broadband networks in a largely suburban nation, the prices Americans pay for broadband services are reasonable and the performance of our networks is better than in all but a handful of nations that have densely populated urban areas and have used government subsidies to leap-frog several generations of technology ahead of where the market would go on its own in response to changing consumer demands. All in all, the state of American broadband is good and getting better, but there is still room for improvement in selected areas.
Nielsen’s Digital Transition Tracker provides a comprehensive view of the home entertainment category, which includes any paid format used to access TV and movie content at home or on a mobile device, such as DVDs or Blu-ray discs, digital rentals, Pay Per View, or subscription streaming. The report looks at findings among the general U.S. population and measures the overall size of the category over time for both TV and movies.
Courtesy of: Nielsen
This TV Trends Report is packed full of facts and figures about the television industry. For more information, visit thinktv.com.au or follow us @Think_TV
THE NIELSEN TOTAL AUDIENCE REPORT: Q2 2016Filipp Paster
The Nielsen Total Audience Report is designed to enable the industry to track changes in media usage. We have consistently reported that overall usage has increased–that a major effect of new devices and services is additive to consumer’s total time spent with media. We have also shown how usage of individual devices and platforms has changed over time as the media landscape continues to evolve.
This iteration of the Nielsen Total Audience Report focuses on the media channel choices within the many different platforms consumers have at their disposal and the amount they routinely turn to.
Ericsson ConsumerLab, annual TV & Media reportEricsson
This report looks at changing consumer behaviors and values such as the increase of streaming video as well as growing willingness to pay for anywhere access.
The TV landscape is changing. New aggregators are enabling consumers to decide what they want to watch and pick-and-mix their own services.
This disruption puts the user at the center. It will be up to brands and service providers to build compelling consumer experiences.
L.E.K. recently conducted the first in-depth analysis of U.K. Millennials’ media consumption habits by life stage, from living at home with parents all the way through to starting their own families. The research, which covers six life stages, shatters the common assumption that, once millennials are older and have their own children, they revert to more traditional media consumption patterns.
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1. STATE
OF THE
MEDIA
THE
CROSS-
PLATFORM
REPORT
QUARTER 1, 2011
2. UNDERSTANDING THE VIDEO CONSUMER
The average American today has more ways to watch video— WHO’S WATCHING (AND HOW)
whenever, however and wherever they choose. While certain By Ethnicity: African-Americans watch the most video content,
segments of the population are migrating toward specific devices or including traditional TV and mobile video, though less timeshifted
viewing habits, the resounding trend is this: Americans are spending TV than the general population. Asians have emerged as the
more time watching video content on traditional TVs, mobile hands-down leader in time spent watching video on the Internet,
devices and via the Internet than ever before. averaging six-plus hours more per month than Whites and nearly
TIME SPENT WATCHING four hours more per month than the next closest ethnic group,
Hispanics. Asians also watch far less traditional TV than the general
Overall TV viewership increased 22 minutes per month per person
population—more than a third less than Whites and half as much as
over last year, demonstrating moderate growth and remaining
African-Americans. Like Asians, Hispanics watch less traditional TV
the dominant source of video content for all demographics.
but more Internet video than the general population, but to a less
Even the lowest fifth quintile of TV viewers still averages an
extreme degree.
hour of TV consumption per day, with the highest quintile
tuning in for nearly ten hours per day. Satellite, broadcast-only and wired cable delivery of TV content is
nearly even among three of the four ethnic groups tracked, with
Though still accounting for just a handful of hours per month,
Hispanics being the outliers. They are more likely to get satellite or
mobile video viewing continues to see marked gains, with the
be broadcast-only than Whites, African-Americans and Asians, and
number of Americans watching video on their mobile devices
much less likely to get wired cable.
increasing 41 percent over last year and more than 100 percent
since 2009. Timeshifted TV continues to grow, both in the By Gender: When it comes to TV consumption, women of all ages
penetration of DVR devices in the home and the time spent. spend more time than their male counterparts. On the flipside,
men consistently spend more time streaming video online.
Internet video streaming also saw increases in time spent; this
behavior is the highest among a younger and diverse subset of By Age: Age plays an interesting role in video audience consumption
the population. across media, with the age groups 25-34, 35-49 and 50-64 each
dominating a specific platform. Traditional TV viewership steadily
DEVICE & DELIVERY PENETRATION
increases with age, so it comes as no surprise that Adults 50-64
Nielsen data shows that consumers are willing to pay for
make up the largest segment of the traditional TV audience (25%).
high-quality TV content—they’re just looking for the right fit for their
The largest segment of the Internet video audience is Adults
needs. While there are shifts between distributors, the number of
35-49 (27%), while the largest segment of the mobile video audience
consumers paying for TV content has remained consistent. Over the
is 25-34 year olds (30%).
past year, satellite and telephone company-delivered TV subscriptions
increased while subscriptions to wired cable decreased slightly. Younger Americans are continuing a trend toward streaming video
Broadcast-only households remained stagnant. online. Those 12-17 spend a third of their Internet time watching video.
The majority of TV homes—roughly two-thirds—now have an
HDTV, an increase of more than 20 percent over last year. Slightly
less than half have a video game console or a DVR,
45 percent and 40 percent, respectively.
1
3. EMERGING TRENDS
In-Home Streaming vs. Traditional TV Viewing: While Nielsen Hispanic Viewing Habits: The growth of the U.S. Hispanic
data has consistently indicated that the heaviest media consumers population puts even greater emphasis on the need to understand this
do so across all platforms, this past fall a segment of consumers group of consumers. Hispanic mobile subscribers are the most likely
more clearly emerged that defies that notion. The new trend to have a smartphone, while White mobile subscribers are the least.
among our TV and Internet homes shows the lightest traditional The greater use of smartphones could be linked to Hispanics watching
television users streaming significantly more Internet video via more video on their mobile devices than the general population.
their computers, and the heaviest streamers under-indexing for Likewise, the availability of Spanish-language channels available on
traditional TV viewership. This behavior is led by those ages 18-34. satellite continues to drive the increased number of Hispanics who opt
for satellite-delivery of their TV content.
The group of consumers exhibiting this behavior is significant
but small. More than a third of the TV/Internet population is not Cord Swapping: Debunking the myth that consumers are no longer
streaming, whereas less than one percent are not watching TV. willing to pay for television content subscriptions, Nielsen found that
91 percent of TV households still paid for a TV subscription in Q1
This emerging trend is illustrated below and on the following pages.
2011. Instead, evidence points to a slight reshuffling of the method
selected, whether cable, through telephone companies or satellite.
For the graphic on pages 3-4,
“The Evolving Relationship Between Streaming Content and TV Viewing”
METHODOLOGY:
We placed them into five groups (quintiles) of equal size, ranked by how much time they streamed content in their homes, and
examined their TV viewing behavior. A sixth group of individuals, who did not stream content at all, were therefore excluded from
the visualization on the proceeding pages.
1 2 3 4 5
GROUP 1 GROUP 2 GROUP 3 GROUP 4 GROUP 5 NON-USERS
n=2627 n=2626 n=2626 n=2625 n=2624 n=7253
Heaviest users Lightest users Non-content
streamers
Then we re-grouped the same people by how much time they spent watching TV, and then looked at their in-home streaming habits.
As with the content streamers above, a sixth group of individuals, who did not watch TV at all, were therefore excluded from
the visualization on the proceeding pages.
1 2 3 4 5
GROUP 1 GROUP 2 GROUP 3 GROUP 4 GROUP 5 NON-USERS
n=4058 n=4058 n=4057 n=4057 n=4056 n=95
Heaviest users Lightest users Non-TV
viewers
We observed this behavior over two quarters (Q4 2010 through Q1 2011) and noticed two interesting and unprecedented
correlations between content streaming and TV viewing.
2
4. In analyzing cross-platform data
over two quarters (Q4 2010 to Q1 2011),
we discovered two interesting and
unprecedented behaviors.
THE EVOLVING
RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN
STREAMING CONTENT
& TV VIEWING
OBSERVATION 1: CONTENT STREAMING
Nielsen data shows an emerging behavior shift with the heaviest in-home streamers under-indexing for
traditional TV viewership.
2010 Q4, Persons 2+ 2011 Q1, Persons 2+
14.5 1 270.7 18.8 1 290.0
269.5
285.4
266.9
281.1
265.4
2.4 2 3.1 2
0.9 3 1.1 3
0.3 4 272.9
262.7 0.3 4 272.4
0.0 5 0.1 5
average daily minutes average daily minutes average daily minutes average daily minutes
of streaming content of TV viewing of streaming content of TV viewing
3
5. HOW TO READ THE VISUALIZATION:
By focusing on a subset of the 2011 “Persons 2+” data, the 18-34 demographic, more pronounced behaviors emerge.
2011 Q1, 18-34 2011 Q1, 18-34
27.0 1 246.5 522.0 1 5.9
245.0
232.9
231.7
270.6 2
175.6 3
3.8 2
1.3 3 94.8 4 4.0
3.9
0.4 4 212.1 23.7 5 3.8
0.1 5
average daily minutes average daily minutes average daily minutes average daily minutes
of streaming content of TV viewing of TV viewing of streaming content
This is the 18-34 demographic This is the number of daily Here, the TV watching quintiles are
organized by time spent minutes each quintile spends arranged the same way on the left,
streaming content, divided into watching TV. You can see the with amount of content streaming on
equal-sized quintiles and highest amount of streaming the right. Notice that the highest
distributed on a vertical axis. correlates with the least amount of TV watching correlates with
amount of TV watching. a low amount of content streaming.
OBSERVATION 2: TV VIEWING
Nielsen data shows an emerging behavior shift with the lightest TV viewers over-indexing for content streaming at home.
2010 Q4, Persons 2+ 2011 Q1, Persons 2+
577.8 1 3.0 598.0 1 3.8
319.1 2 335.9 2
3.0
219.1 3 2.3 229.8 3
2.2 2.8
141.1 4 146.7 4
2.1
56.6 5 2.0 57.9 5 2.5
average daily minutes average daily minutes average daily minutes average daily minutes
of TV viewing of content streaming of TV viewing of content streaming
4
6. HOW PEOPLE WATCH
TABLE 1. A Week in the Life – Weekly Time Spent in Hours: Minutes – By Age Demographic
K T A A A A A P Hispanic African-American
2-11 12-17 18-24 25-34 35-49 50-64 65+ 2+ 2+ 2+
On Traditional TV* 26:31 24:21 26:28 30:34 36:23 44:54 49:17 35:37 30:42 47:37
Watching 1:49 1:31 1:30 3:11 3:11 2:48 1:40 2:25 1:34 1:42
Timeshifted TV*
Using the Internet 0:29 1:17 4:02 6:01 5:55 4:59 2:41 3:59 2:58 3:27
on a computer**
Watching Video on 0:07 0:20 0:48 0:57 0:38 0:25 0:12 0:33 0:32 0:30
Internet**
Mobile Subscribers NA 0:20^^ 0:15 0:10 0:05 0:02 <0:01 0:07 0:12 0:13
Watching Video on
a Mobile Phone^
Table 1 reflects re-issued numbers for Time Spent Using the Internet on a Computer, released 08/11.
Source: Nielsen. Table 1 is uniquely based on the Total Population in the US—all 297 million Americans over age 2—whether or not they have the technology.
TABLE 2. Overall Usage – Number of Users 2+ (in 000’s) – Monthly Reach
Q1 11 Q4 10 Q1 10 % Diff Yr to Yr
Watching TV in the home° 288,500 289,284 286,225 0.8%
Watching Timeshifted TV° 107,065 105,936 94,599 13.2%
(all TV homes)
Using the Internet on a computer** 190,913 191,237 191,301 -0.2%
Watching Video on Internet** 142,437 141,420 135,855 4.8%
Using a Mobile Phone^ 231,000 230,300 229,495 0.7%
Mobile Subscribers Watching Video on a Mobile Phone^ 28,538 24,708 20,284 41.0%
Source: Nielsen.
TABLE 3. Monthly Time Spent in Hours: Minutes – Per User 2+
Q1 11 Q4 10 Q1 10 % Diff Yr Hrs:Min Diff
to Yr Yr to Yr
Watching TV in the home* 158:47 154:05 158:25 0.2% 0:22
Watching Timeshifted TV* (all TV homes) 10:46 10:27 9:36 12.2% 1:10
DVR Playback (only in homes with DVRs) 26:14 25:52 25:48 1.7% 0:26
Using the Internet on a computer** 25: 33 25: 49 25: 54 -1.4% -0:21
Watching Video on Internet** 4: 33 4: 24 3: 23 34.5% 1:10
Mobile Subscribers Watching Video on a Mobile Phone^ 4:20 4:20 3:37 20.0% 0:43
Source: Nielsen. Based on total users of each media. Additional Note: TV viewing patterns in the US tend to be seasonal, with usage patterns different in winter
months than summer months—sometimes leading to declines/increases in quarter to quarter usage.
5
7. TV VIEWERSHIP
INCREASED
22 MINUTES
PER MONTH
OVER LAST YEAR
TABLE 4a. Monthly Time Spent in Hours: Minutes – Age Demographic
K T A A A A A P
2-11 12-17 18-24 25-34 35-49 50-64 65+ 2+
On Traditional TV* 117:29 107:40 123:00 137:04 160:52 198:13 220:49 158:47
Watching Timeshifted TV (all TV homes) 8:05 6:45 6:58 14:19 14:07 12:23 7:31 10:46
DVR Playback (only in homes with DVRs) 18:09 15:56 18:13 31:31 30:37 30:41 26:59 26:14
Using the Internet on a computer** 5: 06 9: 55 27: 40 32: 41 30: 32 28: 05 22: 46 25: 33
Watching Video on Internet** 2: 12 3: 40 7: 41 6: 54 4: 40 3: 17 2: 30 4: 33
Mobile Subscribers Watching Video on a NA 8:40 5:47 3:37 3:28 2:53 2:10 4:20
Mobile Phone^
Source: Nielsen. Based on total users of each media. Traditional TV and Timeshifted viewing estimates are based on persons in TV Households (295 million) DVR
Playback based on persons in DVR Households (120 million).
TABLE 4b. Continuation of Table 4a with Additional Demo Breaks
A A A A
18-34 18-49 25-54 55+
On Traditional TV* 131:17 145:36 158:01 213:00
Watching Timeshifted TV (all TV homes) 10:45 12:08 13:13 9:49
DVR Playback (only in homes with DVRs) 26:41 28:42 30:47 29:29
Using the Internet on a computer** 30: 50 30: 41 31: 09 25: 00
Watching Video on Internet** 7: 11 5: 55 5: 18 2: 39
Mobile Subscribers Watching Video on a Mobile Phone^ 4:20 4:20 3:37 2:53
Source: Nielsen. Based on total users of each media. Traditional TV and Timeshifted viewing estimates are based on persons in TV Households (295 million) DVR
Playback based on persons in DVR Households (120 million).
6
8. TABLE 5. Video Audience Composition – Monthly Time Spent By Gender
M2-17 F2-17 M 18-49 F 18-49 M 50+ F 50+ M2+ F2+
On TV* 113:13 114:29 139:50 151:18 195:15 217:44 150:53 166:20
On the Internet** 03:04 02:44 07:02 04:57 02:44 02:22 05:25 03:48
On Mobile Phones^^ NA NA 4:20 4:20 2:10 3:37 4:20 4:20
Source: Nielsen. (Based on total users of each media.)
TABLE 6. Video Audience Composition – Monthly Time Spent in Hours: Minutes – Ethnicity & Race
White African- Hispanic Asian
American
On Traditional TV* 155:33 212:53 135:42 100:25
Watching Timeshifted TV (all TV homes) 11:55 7:37 6:56 8:14
DVR Playback (only in homes with DVRs) 26:59 22:12 24:03 22:47
Watching Video on Internet** 3:57 5:52 6:24 10:19
Mobile Subscribers Watching Video on a Mobile Phone^ 3:37 6:30 4:20 4:20
Source: Nielsen. (Based on total users of each media.)
TABLE 7a. Video Audience Composition – Age Demographic
K2-11 T12-17 A 18-24 A 25-34 A 35-49 A 50-64 A 65+
On TV* 11% 6% 7% 12% 22% 25% 18%
On the Internet** 8% 7% 9% 17% 27% 22% 10%
On Mobile Phones^ NA 12% 20% 30% 26% 10% 2%
Source: Nielsen. (Based on total users of each media.)
TABLE 7b. Continuation of Table 7a with Additional
Demo Breaks
A A A A
18-34 18-49 25-54 55+
On TV* 19% 41% 43% 34%
On the Internet** 26% 53% 53% 24%
On Mobile Phones^ 50% 76% 58% 7%
Source: Nielsen. (Based on total users of each media.)
7
9. DEVICE AND DELIVERY PENETRATION
TABLE 8. Television Distribution Sources - Number of CHART 1. Source Distribution
Households (in 000’s)
Quarterly Estimates
Market Break Q1 11 Q4 10 Q1 10 100
Broadcast Only 11,193 11,147 11,170 30.2 30.1 29.4
80
Wired Cable 62,651 63,393 64,951 6.7 6.3 5.3
% Distribution of Scaled
Telco 7,654 7,339 6,042 60
Installed Counts
Satellite 34,297 34,273 32,877
40 53.8 54.2 55.9
Source: Nielsen. (Based on Quarterly Universe Estimates.)
20
9.4 9.4 9.4
TABLE 9. Cable/Satellite with Internet Status - Number 0
Quarter 1, Quarter 4, Quarter 1,
of Households (in 000’s) 2011 2010 2010
Broadcast Only Wired Cable Telco Satellite
Q1 11 Q4 10 Q1 10
Broadcast Only and Broadband 4,665 4,491 3,782
Source: Nielsen National People Meter, data from the 15th of each month,
Broadcast Only and No 6,089 6,130 6,822 based on scaled installed counts.
Internet/Narrowband
Cable Plus and Broadband 79,216 78,525 74,760 CHART 2. Cable/Satellite with Internet Status Tracking
Cable Plus and No Internet/ 24,625 25,610 28,012
Narrowband Quarterly Estimates
100
4.7 5.0 5.5
Source: Nielsen. Please see “Note” definitions in footnotes section on Page 10. 4.4 4.2 3.7
80
19.6 20.7 22.8
TABLE 10. Television Distribution Sources by Ethnicity 60
% of Total U.S.
White African- Hispanic Asian 40
American 70.1 69.0 66.6
Broadcast Only 9% 11% 15% 10% 20
Wired Cable 61% 63% 51% 65%
0
Quarter 1, Quarter 4, Quarter 1,
Telco 7% 7% 6% 9% 2011 2010 2010
Satellite 31% 27% 35% 27% Cable/Satellite and Cable/Satellite and
Broadband Narrowband/No Internet
Source: Nielsen.
Broadcast Only Broadcast Only and
and Broadband Narrowband/No Internet
Source: Nielsen National People Meter, data from the 15th of each month,
based on scaled installed counts. Please see “Note” definitions in footnotes
section on Page 10.
8
10. TABLE 11. Devices in TV Households (in 000’s)
UE (000)
Q1 11 Q4 10 Q1 10
Any DVD Player +
99,898 100,335 100,806
Any DVR 43,661 42,866 38,417
Any High Definition TV 75,535 71,900 62,470
Any Video Game 49,687 49,735 47,105
+
BluRay included in count
Source: Nielsen.
TABLE 12. Mobile Device Penetration by Ethnicity
White African- Hispanic Asian
American
Smartphone 30% 39% 53% 48%
Feature phone 70% 61% 47% 52%
Source: Nielsen.
91 PERCENT
OF TV HOUSEHOLDS
PAID FOR A
TV SUBSCRIPTION
IN Q1 2011
9
11. FOOTNOTES FOR CHARTS:
° Watching TV in the home includes those viewing at least one minute (reach) within the measurement period. This includes Live viewing plus any playback
within the measurement period. Quarter 1 2011 Television data is based on the following measurement interval: 12/27/2010 – 03/27/2011. Due to
methodological improvements, the data for Q1 2011 is based on duration weighted averages. January data is based on Television Usage plus Live DVR
Playback and February and March data is based on Television Usage only, because the DVR Playback has been incorporated into the Persons Television
Usage(PUT) Statistic.
* TV in the home includes Live usage plus any playback viewing within the measurement period. Timeshifted TV is playback primarily on a DVR but includes
playback from VOD, DVD recorders, server based DVR’s and services like Start Over.
** Internet figures are from home and work. Hours:minutes for Internet and video use are based on the universe of persons who used the Internet/watched
online video via their computers. All Internet figures are weekly or monthly averages over the course of the quarter. Due to enhancements to Nielsen
NetView and Nielsen VideoCensus in June 2009, trending of previously-reported data with current results may show percentage differences attributable to
these product enhancements and should only be compared directionally. Data for 1Q 2010 and 4Q 2010 (table 2 & table 3) have been corrected to include
restated data. Data for NetView were restated from February 2010 through October 2010 and VideoCensus were restated from March 2010 through
November 2010 due to technological issues which understated time spent metrics. All data were computed via custom analyses reports using Nielsen
NetView and Nielsen Video Census data.Table 1 reflects re-issued numbers for Time Spent Using the Internet on a Computer, released 08/11.
^ Video user projection, time spent and composition data based on survey analysis of past 30 day use during the period. The mobile video audience figures
in this report include mobile phone users who access mobile video through any means (including mobile Web, subscription-based, downloads and
applications). In the Q1 2010 Three Screen Report, Nielsen updated the methodology for “People using a mobile phone” to the 13+ population to align with
the projection of mobile video viewers, and all other mobile video estimates.
^^ Nielsen’s mobile survey reports mobile video usage for those users 13 and older. Thus, 12-17 is T13-17 for all mobile data.
NOTE: Definitions of Narrowband and Broadband. Narrowband (often referred to as Dial Up) is defined as a household that accesses the Internet via a
telephone line. Broadband (often referred to as High Speed) is defined as a household that accesses the Internet via DSL, Cable Internet through cable
provider, Fiber Optic Service, U-verse, Satellite Internet, Data Card (aircard that connects to a cellular phone network) or PC tethered to cell phone (cellular
phone network). Lastly, if the household has multiple connection speeds then the fastest connection speed is reported for that household.
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