 |
Opinion "Communicate,
Collaborate, Innovate" |
| Issue:
32/08 |
Ofcom
Market Study 2008
|
August
20, 2008
|
The
Communications Market 2008 – Ofcom Research
Report
Ofcom’s annual market report provides interesting indicators:
| |
o
Household spend is down – consumers are paying less for
more
o Broadband speeds are increasing
o Rural areas are being connected
o Services provided over Unbundled Local Loops grew
o Mobile broadband grew
o Digital Television and Digital Radio uptake is growing |
Key market
trends
| |
o
Communications industry revenue increased by 4.0% in 2007,
to £51.2bn in 2007, with telecoms industry revenue
the fastest growing component, up 4.1% on the year.
o Real
monthly household spend on communications services fell for
the third year to £93.48, down 1.8% on 2006, driven
by a 6% drop in fixed telecoms spend and a 4% drop in broadband
spend. Prices have fallen by 4.4% since 2004, reflecting
cheaper prices, which have fallen despite growing take-up
and use of many services during this period.
o The
availability of key communications services extended further
into rural areas during 2007.
o A
number of developments suggest that faster broadband speeds
are becoming more widely available: |
| |
•
BT continued to roll out 8 Mbit/s services across its network;
• the number of premises with access to an unbundled local exchange rose from
66.6% to 82.6% in Q1 2008; and
• by June 2008 almost half of all unbundled exchanges had four or more providers
in them. |
o These
factors drove up the average blended headline speed across
the UK from 3.6 Mbit/s in December 2006 to 5.9 Mbit/s at
the end of Q1 2008.
o The proportion
of homes taking broadband services grew to 58% by Q1 2008,
a rise of six percentage points on a year earlier. However,
the rate of growth is slowing, following increases of 11%
and 10% in the previous two years. Take-up of products offered
by local loop unbundlers (LLU) increased from 9% to 19% of
lines in areas where LLU services are available.
o Digital
television penetration rose by 7.5 percentage points over
the year to Q1 2008 to reach 87.1%, and is now as prevalent
in UK households as fixed telephone connections.
o Two and
a half million DAB digital radio sets were sold in the year
to June 2008, taking total cumulative sales to 8.3 million.
DAB sets accounted for a fifth of all sets sold in the year
to April 2008 and around 27% of adults now have access to
a DAB set in the home.
o Mobile
telephony (including an estimate for messaging) accounted
for 40% of the total time spent using telecoms services,
compared to 25% in 2002. However, much of this growth has
come about as a result of an increase in the overall number
of voice call minutes (from 217 in 2002 to 247 in 2007) rather
than because of substitution with fixed voice, which still
accounted for 148 billion minutes last year, down only 10%
from 165 minutes in 2002.
o Satisfaction
levels for communications services remained high in 2007
at 88% or above. Satisfaction with fixed-line telephony declined
from 92% to 88%, while mobile telephony satisfaction rose
slightly to 94% and satisfaction with digital TV was unchanged
at 90%. |
Communications services and the environment
| |
o
Although nearly three-quarters of consumers (72%) say
that they care about the environment and take it into account
in their personal lives, only 39% say that they compare environmentally-friendly
aspects when purchasing communications devices. |
Use
of communications services by older consumers
| |
o
Take-up of fixed-line telephony services among people over
65 was 99% in Q1 2008 (up marginally from 98% in Q2 2005),
higher than the Q1 UK average
of 88% (down from 91%).
o Those
with an internet connection spent 30 minutes longer (50%)
online per day than the UK average, although they accounted
for just 6% of total UK internet usage because take-up was
lower among this group.
o However,
older people remain much lower users of mobile phones than
the general population; only 7% of users aged over 65 make
a mobile call every day (50% for all adults), 5% send a text
daily (compared to 48%) and nearly nine in ten of these users
have a pre-pay phone. |
Advertising – a changing market
| |
o
The UK’s advertising market grew by 6.3% to £14.9bn
in 2007, the largest growth rate for three years and the
first year in which growth has outstripped inflation since
2005.
o However,
the majority of this growth came from internet advertising,
which has risen by an average of 70.2% in each of the last
five years to reach £2.8bn. For the first time in 2007
the internet attracted more advertising spend than the combined
net advertising revenues of ITV1, Channel 4, S4C and Five
(£2.4bn) , and as much as all outdoor and magazine
advertising spend combined. However, newspapers still attract
more advertising than any other medium, at £4.7bn in
2007. |
Key points: converging markets
| |
o
Consumer take-up of devices with converged functionality
rose significantly in 2007. Homes with a digital television
decoder connected to their main
set rose from 80% to 87%; people with access to a digital video recorder
increased by 8 percentage points or 53%, to 23% of homes; MP3 player ownership
stood at 45% of individuals (up five percentage points) while consumers
with access to a DAB digital radio nearly doubled to 27%.
o Mobile
broadband emerged in 2008 as an increasingly popular means
of accessing the internet. Seventy-five per cent of those
with access to mobile broadband use it at home, 18% do
so at work and 27% while elsewhere/on the move.
o Four
in ten households took a bundled communications service
in 2007 (the same proportion as in 2006), but Ofcom’s
research suggests that more complex bundles are becoming
increasingly popular, with a shift during 2007 in favour
of the triple-play of fixed/broadband/TV. |
Key points:
telecoms
| |
o
Operator-reported telecoms service revenue rose by 4% in
2007 to £38.8bn, driven by a 9% increase in mobile
retail revenue, which for the first time exceeded the combined
revenue from fixed telephony, internet and corporate data
services.
o The
amount of time spent making phone calls continues to grow;
UK consumers spent 6% longer on phone calls in 2007 than
in 2006. This was due to a 21% rise in outbound mobile
minutes. Ninety-nine billion minutes of outbound calls
were made from the UK’s 74 million active mobile
connections in 2007 – a rise of 91% in the number
of minutes and 48% in the number of connections since 2002.
o However,
fixed-line voice has remained resilient, with overall outbound
minutes falling by just 2% to 148 billion minutes in 2007.
Sixty per cent of voice minutes originated on fixed lines
in 2007, and in Q1 2008 just 12% of households had no fixed
line (with 11% of households being mobile-only).
o Although
still increasing, the rate of broadband growth is slowing;
by the end of 2007, 58% of UK households had a broadband
connection, up from 52% a year previously and from 41%
two years ago. The majority of this increase (4%) was due
to households migrating from narrowband (dial-up) access,
while the remaining 2% was as a result of households connecting
to the internet for the first time.
o The
number of 3G connections (including mobile broadband connections)
in the UK increased by 60% during 2007 to reach 12.5 million
by the end of the year, amounting to 17% of all mobile
connections.
o More
adults in the UK use text messaging than use the internet:
59 billion SMS messages were sent in 2007, an average of
68 a month sent from each mobile connection (up 28% on
2006).
o The
proportion of premises connected to an unbundled local
exchange increased by 14 percentage points to 80% during
2007, while the number of unbundled local loop (LLU) broadband
connections almost trebled to 3.7 million.
o The
UK is moving towards the wide availability of super-fast
broadband networks; BT and Virgin have announced investment
in fibre-based next-generation access networks which could
offer speeds in excess of 30 Mbit/s.
o Nine
in ten fixed-voice, mobile and broadband users are satisfied
with the service they receive. However, one in five said
that the speed of their broadband was slower than they
expected. |
** Details
for coming events will be forwarded via normal notice/event channels.
***This email has
been sent from: Patrick
Sinclair, Australian Telecommunications Users
Group, Suite 506, Level 5, 815 Pacific Hwy Chatswood
NSW 2067 |
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