electronics

Smartphone Satisfaction Tied To Operating System

Being happy with one’s smartphone (and the likelihood of purchasing the same kind of smartphone later) is becoming more closely tied to the system powering it than the bells and whistles it provides.

According to J.D. Power & Associates’ most recent Wireless Smartphone Satisfaction Study, the operating system that powers a phone is becoming an increasingly important driver behind device selection, user experience and brand satisfaction. 

“When people are considering their smartphones, we’re hearing more about the operating system,” Kirk Parsons, senior director of telecommunications services at J.D. Power, tells Marketing Daily

As many phones have reached technological parity and offer many of the same features, the operating system has become a key driver for both selection and satisfaction with a smartphone, Parsons says. Nearly one quarter (24%) of smartphone owners cited operating system or phone operation as the main reason for choosing their device, up from 22% a year ago. At the same time, the percentage of smartphone owners that cited features as their primary driver declined (32%, down from 38% in 2013). 

Satisfaction, meanwhile, correlates with those drivers, as does repurchase intent. Customers who bought smartphones based on operating system were more satisfied (861, on a 1,000-point scale) than those who made a selection based on cost (808), and the percentage of those who said they would “definitely” repurchase a similar phone was also higher (38% vs. 19%).

"To get ahead of the competition and satisfy customers, manufacturers must meet and exceed the expectations of customers, ensuring the OS allows the device’s features and services to work intuitively and seamlessly. Doing so will help drive satisfaction and loyalty to the brand.” 

That satisfaction also bleeds into other areas. Nearly half of smartphone owners (43%) said they have at least one other device such as a PC or tablet with the same operating system. Among those customers, 71% said the other device was a tablet. 

“Once you get in the ecosystem, the likelihood of buying products with the same OS goes up,” Parsons says. “[Manufacturers] are realizing that as people start adding devices the operating systems are going to be more important.”

2 comments about "Smartphone Satisfaction Tied To Operating System".
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  1. Michael Kaplan from Blue Sky Creative, October 20, 2014 at 8:45 a.m.

    Interestingly, what the story leaves out is what operating system is most favored. Next time, please don't leave out the punchline of this little joke.

  2. Jonathan McEwan from MediaPost, October 20, 2014 at 12:04 p.m.

    I second that. Since smartphones are divided into two main OS camps — Android and iOS, with outliers like Blackberry and Windows Phone having little or no traction.

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