WEBseries mas populares pero prefieren las Series TV



Independientemente de la popularidad creciente de los contenidos online, 94% de los adultos que suscriben a servicios de TV por cable o satelital, prefieren ver TV en la tradicional Televisión según lo indica un estudio de Nielsen para Cable and Telecommunications Association for Marketing.

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Despite the growing popularity of viewing television content online, 94 percent of adults that subscribe to cable or satellite services prefer to watch television on traditional TV sets, according to new research by The Nielsen Company, writes MarketingCharts.


According to the study conducted for the Cable & Telecommunications Association for Marketing (CTAM):

Some 35 percent of the adult broadband users surveyed said they had watched at least one television program (originally shown on TV) via the internet.
Of those who sought out video content online, 87 percent watched television programs directly from a TV network website.
82 percent of those who watched video content online reported that they went online to find a specific television program that they had missed when it first aired on TV.
Online television viewers are not only catching up on their favorite shows; nearly 40 percent report using the internet to get the scoop on actors and upcoming episodes:

Asked to choose from 17 online content categories, online TV viewers said they prefer to watch shorter video clips online: Movie trailers (53 percent), user generated videos (45 percent), music videos and general news segments (37 percent), comedy programs (31 percent), and sports clips (31 percent) were respondents' top choices.

People are spending more time online each week than they were two years ago. More than half of the respondents (51 percent) reported being online for at least three hours a week in 2007. In 2005, just 41 percent of those surveyed said they spent three or more hours online per week.

Services associated with traditional television set viewing also recorded usage growth: For example, free on-demand programs and movies underwent a significant jump in usage, from 49 percent in 2005 to 71 percent in 2007; paid on-demand usage increased from 46 percent to 55 percent.

Other key findings from the report:

HDTV subscribers are exceptionally loyal: Of those respondents who own HDTV sets, two-fifths (41 percent) subscribe to a high-definition programming service. These subscribers report making it a point to watch high-definition programs "every time" (20 percent) or "most of the time" (45 percent) they watch television.
Digital cable and HDTV are poised for further growth: Interest in digital cable and HDTV sets is strong among respondents currently without these services or devices. Those interested in digital cable jumped from 9 percent to 20 percent from 2005 to 2007 - and from 18 percent to 28 percent for high-definition TV sets.
Viewers are accessing TV content via new media platforms: Small, but significant, percentages of respondents reported watching television via desktop computers (14 percent), laptops (9 percent), video-enabled mobile phones (6 percent), or other portable video players (5 percent).
Portable video platforms are slowly gaining popularity: While a large proportion (82 percent) of adults in this study own a mobile phone, only 7 percent subscribe to a video downloading service. Of those respondents who own a video iPod, 35 percent have never watched a video on it, 16 percent watch videos two or three times a month, 14 percent watch videos once a week, and 9 percent watch videos daily via iPod.
About the study: CTAM and Nielsen Entertainment Television partnered in conducting the "CTAM Tracking The Evolving Use of Television and its Content: Wave 4 Trend Results and Analysis" study, which looks at how emerging technologies are changing the way Americans access television content.

This study was conducted as part of CTAM's industry trends tracking market research program, in collaboration with Nielsen Entertainment Television. Data was collected via a nationwide telephone survey of 1,200 adults and 300 teens who subscribe to standard cable, digital cable or satellite television services; broadcast TV-only households were not included in the study.

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