Advertisment

Two-third of smartphone owners regularly use IM: Deloitte survey

author-image
Sharath Kumar
New Update

BANGALORE, INDIA: Average number of portable devices owned per respondent in India is around 8.4, according to 'The state of the Indian mobile consumer, 2013' online survey conducted by Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu Limited.

Advertisment

One trend likely to be increasingly prevalent among smartphone and tablet owners is multiple ownership of the same type of device. The online survey was conducted among 2000 consumers in cities such as Mumbai, Delhi, Bangalore, Hyderabad, Chennai, Kolkata, Pune and Ahmedabad. "More consumers with more devices across the globe bring promise to telecom industry. The survey highlights several opportunities and challenges on the horizon for the telecom industry, including the rise of data, and the importance of multi-functional devices," says Neeraj Jain, Senior Director, Deloitte in India.

Multi-functional devices are driving exponential growth in data usage. The survey finds that laptops and smartphones are the devices most used to access the Internet. 69 per cent of the respondents say that they use laptops to access Internet, while 64 per cent use their smartphones. Interestingly, only 24 per cent use tablets to access the Net.

Despite the availability of data plans providing Internet access to mobile users, a significant portion of traffic from mobile devices has moved to Wi-Fi connections. However, mobile network remains the key connectivity channel for smartphones users. About 60 per cent of smartphone users say they use the mobile network for data access. As for laptop users, about 80 per cent of them access the Internet through fixed broadband.

Advertisment

Interestingly, data is one of the main reasons for a bill shock among consumers. More than 60 per cent of the respondents say that there have been times when their bills have been higher than what they expected over the past 12 months. Roaming charges are the main reason for bill shock among 46 per cent respondents, while 33 per cent respondents say it's exceeding call allowances and 32 per cent respondents saying it's exceeding their mobile internet usage allowance. Deloitte sees that reduction in roaming charges lately will further tilt the trend towards data. Competition and a saturated mobile voice market has forced operators to offer very competitive capped data packages, which has led to affordability of data plans.

Telecom operators would need to invest a lot more in network infrastructure to support growing multimedia traffic and optimize network quality of service for better customer experience. According to the study, quality of network for voice and data has become the key differentiator and not price. While 44 per cent of the respondents say that the reason for choosing a service provider depends on quality of network coverage, another 38 per cent say that it is because of the quality of network coverage for Internet.

When it comes to purchasing smartphones, battery life remains the top influencing factor in decision making, followed by design, reliability, brand, operating system and camera quality. As for tablets, brand is the most important factor, followed by reliability of the device, Operating System, Battery life and design.

Along with the growth in smartphone adoption, investment in mobile applications has fueled increasing app usage among mobile users. Smartphones are still the main choice for quick search, social networks and email. More than 65 per cent respondents say they are interested in dynamic pricing of calls and data. Deloitte feels that operators need to embrace dynamic business management (smart pricing) to increase revenue and optimize network usage, in turn increasing customer satisfaction and capacity optimization.

tech-news