20% Of Broadband HHs Use Digital Antenna

New consumer research finds use of antennas for live, local TV is steadily increasing.

Parks Associates today unveiled a study that shows the percentage of U.S. broadband households that use digital antennas in their home has steadily increased to reach 20% near the end of 2017, up from 16% in early 2015.

“360 View: Access and Entertainment Services in U.S. Broadband Households” reveals this increase coincides with a steady decline in pay TV subscriptions and an increase in OTT video subscriptions.

“Increasingly, consumers are cobbling together their own bundles of content sources. Digital antennas are experiencing a resurgence as consumers consider over-the-air TV and OTT video services as alternatives to pay TV,” said Brett Sappington, senior director of research, Parks Associates. “The percentage of ‘Never’ households (households that have never subscribed to pay TV services) has held steady, and the percentage of households actually cutting the cord has increased between 2015 and 2017. Antennas are an affordable source for local channels to these households.”

Parks Associates notes that high cost and low price/value perception dominate reasons for service cancellation and bundle shaving. More than 50% of the households that have switched, shaved, or cut the cord cite the service is “not worth the cost.”

“Pay TV providers need to address this value perception gap and re-establish their role as the consumers’ source for interesting content,” Sappington said. “Opportunities are available. Only 46% of pay TV subscribers are aware that they can access video-on-demand content from their operator, including free programming. Many indicate that they want to purchase online video services through their pay TV provider and to access the service through their channel guide.”

“360 View: Access and Entertainment Services in U.S. Broadband Households” explores the environment, consumer demand, use, and perception of pay TV and broadband services among U.S. broadband households. It also analyzes the impact of over-the-top (OTT) services as well as cord cutting and cord shaving on pay TV services. Additional research shows:

BRAND CONNECTIONS

  • 63% of subscribers who cannot currently restart programs from the beginning find that feature to be appealing.
  • 17% of consumers who cancel their pay TV service would have stayed with their provider if there were no monthly fees for their set-top boxes.
  • Average fees for standalone broadband have increased nearly 25% since 2010.
  • 20% of Wi-Fi households experience problems with coverage in their home.

Comments (3)

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Terry D'Esposito says:

March 15, 2018 at 5:08 pm

An antenna is an antenna. “Digital” antenna is a marketing gimmick. Rabbit ears antennas work just as they did with analog TV.

    Amneris Vargas says:

    March 15, 2018 at 5:51 pm

    RF 101. Antenna shape, length, power, direction, height…all matter. But this story is about OTA growth and its great for broadcasting.

Teri Green says:

March 15, 2018 at 7:04 pm

A lot of people, especially in big dense cities lost all TV when it moved to digital. I live in Chicago and cannot get any TV, so I don’t have it. I thought I’d miss it, but I don’t.