Europe
UK : M:Metrics announced the findings of its first European Benchmark
Surveys.
Inset
shows Seamus McAteer, founder, M:Metrics.
Although
3G users account for a low percentage of mobile phones users overall,
3G users in the U.K. or Germany are as much as five times more likely
to use the multimedia capabilities of handsets, with increased levels
of messaging, and gaming, watching video and downloading new content
for personalization of handsets.
With
7.7 percent of its mobile users subscribing to 3G services, the U.K.
tops Germany and the USA at 3.2 percent and 1.9 percent respectively.
Headquartered
in London, M:Metrics, Ltd., the company's European subsidiary has
launched because, "European mobile and media firms have been
starving for a measurement standard for mobile content consumption,"
said Hervé Le Jouan, Managing Director, M:Metrics. "The
market has reached a point to where an understanding of the audience
for mobile content is absolutely necessary for mobile to evolve as
a viable media channel, and it's a thrill to deliver those authoritative
metrics." Mr. Le Jouan joined M:Metrics after forging a career
as a pioneer in media measurement as a founder of NetValue, an online
audience measurement firm that was acquired by Nielsen//Netratings,
and as a senior executive with MediaMétrie the leader in media
measurement in France.
The Changing Landscape
of 3G
Not surprisingly subscribers to 3G services are significantly more
likely to capture and transmit video with their devices compared with
counterparts on 2G networks. This is reflective not only of the superior
transmission capability of 3G networks but is also due to the fact
that video capture is a standard feature of 3G devices. In Germany
about 9.8 percent of early adopter UMTS subscribers sent video to
another user's handset in a month making them three times more likely
to send video compared with 2G German subscribers. In the UK 18.9
percent of 3G subscribers sent video from their handsets reflecting
the overall higher consumption of data services in this market.
A higher propensity
to consume of video is a distinguishing feature of 3G networks. Approximately
404,000 and 107,000 subscribers to 3G networks viewed short video
clips on their handsets on a monthly basis during the fourth quarter
of 2005 in the UK and German markets respectively. Thus 3G users in
the UK are 9 times more likely to view video on handsets compared
with owners of 2G devices and German 3G users are 13 times more likely
to view video than counterpart subscribers on prior generation networks.
M:Metrics data
indicates that 3G networks attract earlier adopter, more technology-savvy
users. Subscribers to 3G networks are likely to use data services
overall including services that already work well over 2G networks.
"Despite the varied new messaging options, 3G subscribers are
still more likely to use SMS in comparison to non-3G users, so we
are not seeing cannibalisation of SMS revenues, as some have speculated,"
said Paul Goode, vice president and senior analyst, M:Metrics, Ltd.
"Instead, we see that they are sending SMS while being twice
as likely to use mobile e-mail and instant messaging."
Higher consumption
of data services is also reflected in proportionately higher propensity
to download ring-tones and games. Survey data from the fourth quarter
show that 3G subscribers are about twice as likely to download a ring-tone
and between three and four times more likely to download a game.