MarketSource Survey Finds 12-Volt Potential
By Joseph Palenchar On Aug 30 2010 - 4:01am
Alpharetta, Ga. - A sizable percentage of U.S. adults wants to
replace their car stereo system or add such features as HD Radio,
Internet radio, satellite radio or hands-free Bluetooth capability, a
MarketSource survey found.
Those are some of the findings of an exclusive nationwide online
survey for TWICE by MarketSource, a market research company
and provider of integrated sales and market services, which
compiled responses from adults of at least 18 years old in 505
households.
The respondents were asked to rate their intent to buy in the
next year on a scale of one to five, with one meaning “not at all
interested,” to five meaning “extremely interested” or “definitely.”
MarketSource found that 20 percent of adults are “extremely
interested” in replacing one of their current car stereo systems in
the next year to improve sound quality, power output or add new
features and technologies. Thirteen percent, however, said they
have no plans to replace a system.
Interest is highest in adding HD Radio, satellite radio and a
Bluetooth system that reproduces the voice of an incoming caller
through car speakers.
Five percent said they own an HD Radio for the car, and 28
percent are extremely interested in adding the feature in the next
year. Fifteen percent own a satellite radio for the car, and 24 per-the voice of an incoming caller through the car’s speakers, and 31
percent are extremely interested in adding that capability.
Fifteen percent already own a car radio with input that connects
directly to an iPod output, and 21 percent said they were
extremely interested in buying such a radio in the next 12 months.
A total of 29 percent already use an adapter to listen to an iPod or MP3 player through their car stereo, and 27
percent are extremely likely to add that capability
in the coming year.
A sizable chunk of consumers are similarly interested
in Internet radio for the car. Four percent said they
already own a car radio that connects to a smartphone
to stream Internet radio and Internet music services
such as Pandora and Slacker, and 15 percent are extremely
interested in adding that feature.
In another finding, MarketSource found that 9
percent of households with incomes of less than
$75,000 per year are extremely interested in
buying or leasing a new vehicle in the next year,
with 17 percent of households earning more than
$75,000 expressing extreme interest. Eighteen
percent of households with incomes of less than
$75,000 and 23 percent with incomes above that
say they are likely to get a new vehicle, representing
a four on MarketSource’s one-to-five scale.
Consumers buying new vehicles are potential
customers of aftermarket car electronics products,
as are the purchasers of the used vehicles that go
on the market as a result.
The ST5500/CL80 is a compact point-andshoot
camera with 14.2-megapixel image resolution,
HD video recording, touchscreen keypad,
and Wi-Fi and Bluetooth wireless connectivity.
U.S. availability for the camera will be announced
in the near future, Boingo said.
On the OEM side, sales are also up, Struble
said, in part because new-car sales are rising again
but also because of more OEM availability. So far,
automakers have announced that 84 vehicle models
from 14 vehicle brands will offer standard or
optional HD Radio in the 2010 calendar year, and
that number will go up in 2010 as automakers announce
more HD Radio deals, he said.
OEM unit sales to consumers will somewhere
between double and triple this year, he said,
mostly due to increasing HD Radio availability,
but a small part of the increase is due to the
general car sales rebound. The percent of new
vehicles sold with OEM HD radio will exceed 5
percent in calendar 2010, up from the previous
year’s 2-3 percent.
With OEM and CE retailer sales rising, iBiquity
estimates the installed base exceeded 3 million
units at the end of June, based on the company’s
royalty reports.