
New
over-the-top (OTT) TV service consumers don’t have much patience.
Around 75% of OTT users quit a video experience after more than four minutes, according to new study by video optimization
company Conviva.
Reasons include poor video streaming quality and/or excessive interruptions. Only one in four viewers makes it past the four-minute mark.
Still others keep trying. The
research says after having a poor video experience, 49% close the video and try again; 29% close the video and try a different Web site/media platform; 11% stop watching video altogether; and 10% look
for new content on the same app/site.
Additionally, one in three abandoned their OTT provider if they have a bad experience. Estimates are the OTT market could become a $10 billion business by
2018.
Early this year, Conviva conducted a survey of 750 U.S. consumers of both genders, aged 26–34, representing what it says is “an important portion of those who appear most
likely to select OTT video instead of traditional pay TV services.”
Conviva says much also depends on specific markets in how consumers will react. The U.S. is at 3.75 Mbps sustained
picture fidelity -- a high quality -- and a 0.48% interruption rate rate. Other countries have a slightly lower quality rate on average, but a much better lower interruption rate -- including the
U.K., Japan, Canada and the Netherlands.