Providing Market Intelligence for 40 Years

In The News

What the Street Got Wrong About Google

Market research and consulting firm Parks Associates estimates that 19 percent of households with broadband in the U.S. already own a smart home device, thanks in part to increased smartphone ownership.

"Mobile devices .... that's the default user interface outside the home or sometimes even in the home," said Tom Kerber, director of research at Parks Associates. "The smartphone is critical — it opened up the market when smartphones came out."

From the article "What the Street Got Wrong About Google" by Anita Balakrishnan.

Previously In The News

The Streaming Media Device Landscape

Information for The Streaming Media Device Landscape is drawn from multiple sources: Interviews with and research on companies, including consumer electronics (CE) manufacturers, component manufactur...

With NFL Deal, Amazon Accelerates Its Streaming-TV Advertising Ambitions

In streaming TV, Amazon’s most direct point of comparison is Roku. Amazon has become the second-biggest streaming-TV hardware provider in the U.S., accounting for 33% of devices in households in the t...

It's Not Even Close: Apple, Samsung Smartphone Marketleaders

Apple and Samsung are leaving competitors LG and Motorola in the dust. New research from Parks Associates shows, for example, that LG has dropped to just 9% of consumer-reported brand share, behind Ap...

Residential fiber is now table stakes for boosting NOI

A recent Parks Associates survey finds that about 4 in 10 U.S multi-dwelling apartment residents say they're open to bundling internet services with their monthly rent. What's more, over three-fourths...