Providing Market Intelligence for 40 Years

In The News

Analysis: Fragmentation built streaming’s growth and now tests its limits

Parks Associates counted more than 300 streaming services available in the United States, with the average internet household subscribing to 5.3 of them.

For most of television’s history, the limiting factor was supply — channels, time slots, shelf space at the video store. The limiting factor now is attention, and the search bar is where it leaks out.

Parks Associates has a term for the result: fragmentation fatigue.

Pay TV, long treated as the past, is being repositioned as part of the cure. Parks Associates found that 33% of pay TV subscribers stayed because the service offered more content in one place. Bundles follow the same logic.

The trade once thought unthinkable, more ads for less money, has become a routine way to manage a crowded bill.

“Aggregation is now a strategic advantage,” Elizabeth Parks, president and CMO of Parks Associates, said.

From the atricle, "Analysis: Fragmentation built streaming’s growth and now tests its limits" by Dak Dillon

Previously In The News

DOOR launches Scout device combining remote lock control and edge AI for multifamily building health monitoring

Research from Parks Associates has found that operators using connected access control and smart home technology realize a roughly 20 percent gain in operating efficiency and about $80,000 in annual s...

The Smart Money: AI Moves from Promise to Platform

At Parks Associates' CONNECTIONS Conference, the AI data was encouraging, but the gaps – trust, complexity, and monetization – remain unsolved. AI dominated all three days of Parks Associates' 30th...

Video Protection Requirements Are Evolving as Streaming Services Reach Mainstream Audiences

In the early streaming era, distributors often accepted lighter security requirements from emerging platforms hungry for content. That leverage has reversed. Major studios now mandate specific protect...

New Homes Save Homeowners Money, But Builders Face Rising Defect Claims

According to new research from Parks Associates, the connected home market is moving beyond gadget obsession and into something more practical. Consumers increasingly want smart systems that deliver e...