Providing market intelligence for more than 35 years

In The News

This startup, borne from a failed $500 million Silicon Valley darling, believes it has the cure for what’s ailing voice assistants

Voice assistants are integrating into more and more places; the smart speaker market in particular is expected to grow 60% from 2016 to 2017, according to Parks Associates research analyst Dina Abdelrazik. So let’s say one day, voice tech starts to feel normal and become superior to touch — what happens if some apps and devices only support one assistant, while others only work with another? If Amazon's Alexa were to stay dominant, would that let Amazon dictate what devices you buy — and where you shop? Is recreating the type of platform war that led to Android and iOS dominating mobile devices the best thing for voice tech?

From the article "This startup, borne from a failed $500 million Silicon Valley darling, believes it has the cure for what’s ailing voice assistants" by Jeff Dunn.

Previously In The News

The Biden administration wants to ban quit fees for cable customers

That all-inclusive model might not be sustainable in a world where consumers can treat paid TV like they treat streaming platforms, said Jennifer Kent, vice president of research at Parks Associates....

Future of TV Briefing: Streaming subscriber growth re-accelerated in Q3 2023

Earlier this month, research firm Parks Associates published a study reporting that 29% of internet-subscribed households subscribe to at least eight separate streaming services. From the article,...

Hulu for $1, Peacock for $2 — Streamers Pitch Black Friday

“After big growth during the pandemic, the streaming stack has largely plateaued,” said Jennifer Kent, a vice president at industry researcher Parks Associates. “The average streaming household has 5....

Automation key for homeowners to reduce energy consumption

Research from Parks Associates' shows that 91 percent of internet households are actively engaged in reducing energy consumption within their homes. Forty-eight percent report altering their behav...