Press Release: CEA Research Finds Digital Cameras Remain Primary Picture Taking Device; Survey Underscores Need for Industry Involvement in Consumer Archiving AwarenessAug. 12, 2005--Even as they increase in popularity,
camera phones are not likely to replace digital cameras and camcorders as
consumers' primary picture taking device, according to a study recently released
by the Consumer Electronics Association(R) (CEA), which found that some 91
percent of digital camera owners consider their digital camera to be their main
photography device. CEA's "Digital Imaging Study: Sharing and Storing Pictures
and Video," also revealed that consumers are unaware of the need to archive
their digital photos and video - an issue of increasing importance as the
penetration rate for digital cameras nears 50 percent with those camera owners
snapping billions of pictures each year.
Steve Koenig, senior manager of industry analysis
at CEA, said, "Consumers are fortunate that today's digital imaging product
shelf is festooned with convergence photography devices in addition to the still
camera - still cameras that capture full-motion video, digital camcorders that
take still pictures, camera phones, PDAs and wireless phones with image/video
capture capabilities; the list goes on. Many consumers own several photo-capture
devices, but our research shows the digital camera remains consumers' primary
picture taking device and we expect that to continue. Camera phones and other
convergence devices will likely experience improved resolution capabilities, but
the vast majority of consumers will turn to a digital still camera when their
primary purpose is picture taking."
Consumers report they expect to share photos and video
electronically from their digital camera or camcorder, through computers, e-mail
and wireless phones. About two-thirds print their photos and half of them burn
images onto a CD to share with others. A small but significant number of
consumers share their digital photos by printing.
"Consumers tell us electronic sharing of digital
imaging content is the way of the future," Koenig continued. "To make this
happen, consumers really need more Internet bandwidth for e-mail, more
processing power for computers, greater media storage capacity and more robust
wireless phone data networks."
Koenig added that the survey's red flag is the lack of
knowledge or practice of archiving digital imaging content. According to the
more than 1,100 U.S. adults surveyed by CEA, consumers are unaware of the need
to back-up digital photos and video. Only 48 percent said they back-up all or
most of their images, while the same percentage of video is not backed up at
all. Less than half of the consumers are even concerned about losing their
imaging content.
"Many industry groups are addressing the need for
consumer awareness and education about archiving digital images, including CEA
through the Digital Imaging Special Interest Group (SIG)," Koenig concluded.
"This survey demonstrates the industry must continue to beat the drum and
encourage content archiving to help consumers avoid disaster."
"The Digital Imaging Study: Sharing and Storing
Pictures and Video" was administered online to 1,156 U.S. adults in May and was
designed and formulated by CEA Market Research, the most comprehensive source of
sales data, forecasts, consumer research, international research and historical
trends for the consumer electronics industry. The complete study is available
free to CEA member companies. Non-members may purchase the study at www.CE.org/CeaStore.
About CEA:
The Consumer Electronics Association (CEA) is the
preeminent trade association promoting growth in the consumer technology
industry through technology policy, events, research, promotion and the
fostering of business and strategic relationships. CEA represents more than
2,000 corporate members involved in the design, development, manufacturing,
distribution and integration of audio, video, mobile electronics, wireless and
landline communications, information technology, home networking, multimedia and
accessory products, as well as related services that are sold through consumer
channels. Combined, CEA's members account for more than $121 billion in annual
sales. CEA's resources are available online at www.CE.org, the definitive source for
information about the consumer electronics industry.
Posted: Fri - August 12, 2005 at 03:56 PM |