Providing Market Intelligence for 40 Years

In The News

Millennial OTT Penetration May Have Topped Out, More Than Half Subscribe to Two Services

More than 85% of millennials in U.S. households subscribe to one or more OTT video services and penetration among Baby Boomers and older people grew more than 10% between 2016 and last year, according to OTT video demographics research from Parks Associates.

“Overall penetration of subscription OTT video services among millennials has topped out, suggesting that those households that want such a subscription already have one or more. The more interesting and important question is how many subscriptions they will keep,” Brett Sappington, the Senior Director of Research for Parks Associates, said in a press release. “More than one-fourth of millennials subscribe to three or more OTT services, and more than 50% subscribe to at least two.”

From the article "Millennial OTT Penetration May Have Topped Out, More Than Half Subscribe to Two Services" by Carl Weinschenk.

Previously In The News

Sprint Teams Up With Amazon For Monthly Prime Deal

Sprint cites Parks Associates, a market research firm, for stats on smartphone users, stating that 68 percent of smartphone owners listen to streaming music daily, while 71 percent watch short video c...

WWE Hires New Executive For China Expansion

So far, WWE's 24-hour video service is available in 180 countries across Asia, Europe and other regions. By the end of 2015, WWE posted nearly 280,000 paid international subscribers, accounting for...

Netflix, Inc. (NFLX) Customer Satisfaction Lead Narrows On Amazon.com, Inc. (AMZN), Hulu

Netflix subscribers had been loyal till last year, as a recent study by Parks Associates revealed that its users were far less likely to discontinue the service, compared to those of Amazon’s Prime In...

Experts: Wal-Mart Pay Needs Perks

More than 25 percent of U.S. smartphone owners use payment apps at least once a month, according to recent data compiled by Dallas-based research and consulting firm Parks Associates. The firm said...