Posts Tagged ‘Entertainment Marketing’
Connected TV Penetration [CHART]
The share of TV households with a Multimedia Device, Game Console and/or Smart TV has broadened to 58.7%, up from 52.2% during the year-earlier period.
Read MoreConsumers' Expected Video Consumption Changes [CHART]
More than three-quarters of people in several countries across the world believe that their video viewing habits will change in the coming 5 years. The change that most people see coming is watching TV in virtual reality, as if they are inside the content.
Read MoreMultitainment Behavior By Baby Boomers, Gen Xers & Millennials [CHART]
Despite TV’s widespread reach, the attention of its US audience is something that’s increasingly fractured across several devices.
Read MoreMoms' Most-Watched Movie Genres On TV [CHART]
Moms love action and men watch romance. Surprised? A study from Adobe Digital Insights finds that some stale stereotypes simply don’t apply. Mothers watch Crime and Action movies more regularly than Romances, while many men often watch Musicals and Romance movies.
Read MoreMultitainment Behavior, 2015-2019 [CHART]
US consumers are spending more time with their digital devices than ever before, and that holds true while they’re already watching something else.
Read MoreTV Everywhere Adoption [CHART]
More than one-third (34.7%) of respondents with pay-TV service saying they access their providers’ TV Everywhere offering.
Read MoreIndustry Reputations [CHART]
It’s hard to sell to a public that doesn’t view you well… Yet that’s the task faced by the advertising and public relations industry, which continues to rank towards the bottom of all industries in public perception.
Read MoreLive Video Streaming [INFOGRAPHIC]
This infographic from Koeppel Direct illustrates the rise of live video streaming.
Read MoreYouTube Statistics, 2017 [INFOGRAPHIC]
This infographic from filmora illustrates some amazing facts, figures and statistics about YouTube for 2017.
Read MoreFrequency Of Mobile Gaming By Gender [CHART]
New data suggests that females are playing mobile games at a higher frequency than males in the US.
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