Providing market intelligence for more than 35 years

In The News

More trouble ahead at ESPN

The idea that cable uninstaller is a hot new career track says a lot about why ESPN's corporate overlords are tightening belts. Cord-cutting customers are devastating.

"Consumers are looking for content in other places," said Brett Sappington, who directs research at Parks Associates. "So if your revenues are based significantly off of cable TV, then you get hit pretty hard by that."

Even if you hate sports and don't even know what channel ESPN is on, the network gets your money if you have cable.

From the article "More trouble ahead at ESPN" by Mark Garrison.

Previously In The News

Research: 47% of US familiar with AI tech

Parks Associates research in partnership with Adeia reveals 47 per cent of US internet households report familiarity with at least one AI technology, such as tools like ChatGPT or AI-powered image edi...

EV Sales Growth Flattens Following Pandemic Peak

Electric vehicles (or EVs) had received a big boost off the heels of the pandemic as consumer interest over environmental issues coupled with hearty government subsidies helped fuel a respectable boom...

Apple devices have high net promotor scores across consumer electronic products

Parks Associates’ new Tech Ecosystem Dashboard, featuring ownership and purchase intention data from surveys of 5,000-8,000 US internet households, finds the net promoter scores (NPS) for Apple-br...

Warner Bros. Discovery and Disney launch Hulu, Disney+, Max bundle

According to Parks Associates research, U.S. households that had five or more OTT subscriptions declined from 52% in Q3 2023 to 46% in Q1 2024 and average monthly spending on SVOD services dropped fro...