ROCHESTER, N.Y., Feb. 23 /PRNewswire/ -- A December 2006 survey by Harris Interactive(R) shows that most U.S. mobile phone users worry about privacy when it comes to next-generation telecommunications technologies. Known collectively as location-based services (LBS) and presence technology, these services, some of which are already on the market, can tell other contacts where a person is physically located, what communication devices they are using, and how to reach them at any given moment.
About one in four mobile phone owners would like to be able to find out the availability of their contacts (available, busy on a call, unavailable), with 27 percent of them rating this a very appealing option. Eighteen percent would be very interested in the ability to determine the current location of persons on their contact list and 14 percent would like to be able to find out where their contacts had been recently. When asked how they feel about other people having this information about them, the majority of those surveyed say such services are an invasion of privacy (see Table 6).
These are just some of the results of a recent survey of 1,028 U.S. adults conducted online by Harris Interactive(R) between November 30 and December 11, 2006.
Just over half (58%) would want their spouse or significant other to know where they are and whether they are available, while fewer would want children (46%) or other family members (43%) to have this information, and only a handful would want their co-workers (6%) or employers (5%) to have it (see Table 4).
Currently, awareness and immediate purchase intent for LBS and presence services are low. In all, only 4 percent would switch wireless carriers tomorrow to have these features. But three in ten consumers say they would be interested in more information.
"We expect these technologies eventually to catch on," said Joe Porus, VP and Chief Architect with Harris Interactive's Technology and Telecom Practice. "But providers must give users control over location-based features to allay privacy concerns." Milt Ellis, VP and Sr. Consultant with the practice, added, "For marketers of these services, the key initially is to target groups of users -- such as teenagers, busy executives, delivery and emergency service personnel -- who value the benefits of being connected more than they worry about privacy."
Selected results from the survey are shown in the tables below. To view the complete February 2007 issue of The Harris Report(R) that elaborates these data, go to http://www.harrisinteractive.com/news/harrisreport.asp.
TABLE 1
AWARENESS OF PRESENCE SERVICES "There are some new technologies coming to your cell phone called presence or
availability information services. These services allow you to determine the
availability and location of your contacts. Are you aware of any presence
services existing in the marketplace now?"
Base: Mobile Phone Owners
Total
%
Yes 22
No 64
Not Sure 14
TABLE 2
AWARENESS OF PRESENCE PROVIDERS
"You indicated you are aware of existing presence services. Which service
provider(s) do you believe offers these services?"
Base: Aware of presence services
Total
%
Cingular Wireless 41
Verizon Wireless 35
T-mobile 26
Nextel 25
Sprint PCS 22
Not Sure 21
AT&T Wireless 16
Alltel 12
Other 6
Note: Multiple-response question
TABLE 3
APPEAL OF PRESENCE SERVICES
"[On a scale of 1 to 7, where 1 means "Not at all appealing" and 7 means
"Extremely appealing]
Please rate how appealing each of the presence services below are to you."
Base: Mobile Phone Owners
Somewhat
Unappealing Appealing Appealing Mean Rating
(rated (rated 3 (rated (1 to 7
1 or 2) or 4 or 5) 6 or 7) scale)
% % %
The ability to look at your
contact list and determine
if they were available to
talk, busy on a call or
unavailable. 38 35 27 3.7
The ability to determine the
location of persons on your
contact list (snapshot of
where they are now). 53 29 18 3.0
The ability to determine what
locations individuals on
your contact list were over
the last few hours (map of
their whereabouts) 61 25 14 2.6
The ability for friends and
family to see this
information about you. 61 29 10 2.5
The ability for your employer
to see this information about
you. 83 13 4 1.7
TABLE 4
DESIRED CONTACTS FOR PRESENCE SERVICES "Which individuals on your contact list would you want to have these presence
capabilities?"
Base: Mobile Phone Owners
Total
%
Spouse or significant other 58
Children 46
Other family members 43
Friends 31
Other 13
Coworkers 6
Employer 5
Note: Multiple-response question
TABLE 5
IMMEDIATE PURCHASE INTENTS FOR PRESENCE SERVICES
"If a wireless service provider came out with these services tomorrow, what
would be your reaction?"
Base: Mobile Phone Owners
Total
%
Nothing ...I'm not that interested 49
I would wait until my current wireless contract
expired before looking into switching to this
new provider 17
I'm interested and would consider switching
wireless carriers now 4
I'm not sure/I would need more information 30
TABLE 6
RELATIVE INTEREST IN PRESENCE SERVICES
"There are plenty of new features and services coming to your cell phone.
Based on everything you might have heard, where do "Presence" features rate
compared to other ideas?"
Base: Mobile Phone Owners
Total
%
Top of my list -- I'm very interested 5
Middle of the pack -- I'm lukewarm 23
Bottom of the list - There are other things much
more interesting 56
Not sure 17
Note: Percentages may not add up to exactly 100% due to rounding.
TABLE 7
PRIVACY CONCERNS REGARDING PRESENCE SERVICES
"Do you believe any of these types of services are an invasion of privacy?"
Base: Mobile Phone Owners
Yes
%
The ability to look at your contact list and determine if
they were available to talk, busy on a call or unavailable. 34
The ability for friends and family to see this information
about you. 59
The ability to determine the location of persons on your
contact list (snapshot of where they are now). 70
The ability to determine what locations individuals on your
contact list were over the last few hours (map of their
whereabouts) 73
The ability for your employer to see this information about you. 83
None of these 10
Note: Multiple-response question
Methodology
This survey was conducted online within the United States between November 30 and December 11, 2006 among 1,028 adults (age 18 and over). Figures for age, sex, race, education, region and household income were weighted where necessary to bring them into line with their actual proportions in the population. Propensity score weighting was also used to adjust for respondents' propensity to be online.
All surveys are subject to several sources of error. These include: sampling error (because only a sample of a population is interviewed); measurement error due to question wording and/or question order, deliberately or unintentionally inaccurate responses, nonresponse (including refusals), interviewer effects (when live interviewers are used) and weighting.
With one exception (sampling error) the magnitude of the errors that result cannot be estimated. There is, therefore, no way to calculate a finite "margin of error" for any survey and the use of these words should be avoided.
With pure probability samples, with 100 percent response rates, it is possible to calculate the probability that the sampling error (but not other sources of error) is not greater than some number. With a pure probability sample of 1,028 one could say with a ninety-five percent probability that the overall results would have a sampling error of +/-3 percentage points. The subsample of mobile phone owners (n=820) has a sampling error of plus or minus 3.4 percentage points. Sampling error for smaller subsamples is higher and varies. However, that does not take other sources of error into account. This online survey is not based on a probability sample and therefore no theoretical sampling error can be calculated.
These statements conform to the principles of disclosure of the National Council on Public Polls.
About Harris Interactive
Harris Interactive is the 12th largest and fastest-growing market research firm in the world. The company provides innovative research, insights and strategic advice to help its clients make more confident decisions which lead to measurable and enduring improvements in performance. Harris Interactive is widely known for The Harris Poll, one of the longest running, independent opinion polls and for pioneering online market research methods. The company has built what it believes to be the world's largest panel of survey respondents, the Harris Poll Online. Harris Interactive serves clients worldwide through its United States, Europe and Asia offices, its wholly-owned subsidiary Novatris in France and through a global network of independent market research firms. The service bureau, HISB, provides its market research industry clients with mixed-mode data collection, panel development services as well as syndicated and tracking research consultation. More information about Harris Interactive may be obtained at http://www.harrisinteractive.com.
To become a member of the Harris Poll Online and be invited to participate in online surveys, register at http://www.harrispollonline.com/.
Press Contact:
Nancy Wong
585-214-7316
Harris Interactive Inc. 2/07 SOURCE Harris Interactive
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