Remember when
this yearwas the year of interactive TV? And then the next year was, and the next, and the next?
Well, it’s taken a decade, maybe more, to finally
reach the year of interactive TV, and the manifestation of it sure isn’t what the pundits prognosticated. Forget playing along with a game on TV, or clicking on Jennifer Aniston’s sweater.
Interactive TV is simple, and it can scale to pretty much everyone because pretty much everyone has a cell phone. That’s how interactive TV is finally playing out.
Consider this recent discovery: About 16% of American homes with a broadband connection use their mobile device to control what they watch on TV, according to a new survey from research firm The Diffusion Group on multiscreen
behavior. About 12% of adult broadband consumers use a smartphone as a remote control, while 8% use a tablet. Some even use both – about 4%.
Does this mean consumers are
chucking their regular remote controls? Nope. About 80% of broadband homes still use a regular remote control, while 36% of those homes said they use a universal remote.
But
the fact that a meaningful percentage use their mobile device to change channels should not be ignored. The use of mobile phones to control the TV also has far-reaching potential for social media, TDG
said. “Getting consumers to use these devices to control the basic functionality of their televisions is an influential first step towards more widespread use of social TV applications. Not all
will fall in line, but original control use casts a much wider net,” said Michael Greeson, TDG’s president and director of research, in a report.
If the
mobile phone becomes more pervasive as a remote, operators could put both their user interface and their electronic program guide on mobile phones, perhaps as an app.
This
finding also serves as a reminder that consumers set the market pace for technology adoption.