I’m a text voter, get me out of here! The reality TV
craze sweeping the UK has reached the mobile industry, according to
M:Metrics’ latest figures. The measurement firm’s January Benchmark Survey found that 21.8 percent of British mobile subscribers (8.9 million) voted in a TV or radio poll in a month during the quarter ended January 2006, compared with 12.1 percent of German (5 million) and 7 percent of U.S. (12.3 million), mobile subscribers.
M:Metrics data reinforces the fact that text messaging is ubiquitous in Europe. Approximately 83.6 percent and 79.2 percent of British and German mobile phone users respectively sent a text message in a month. Whereas
Germans have embraced SMS as a means to receive news and information with as
much vigour as their British counterparts, at about 7 percent each; the
British are far more likely to use the technology to opine about a
television or radio show.
“The prevalence of reality television shows such as I’m a Celebrity Get Me
Out of Here, Big Brother and X-Factor in the UK is clearly changing mobile
phone behaviour,” said Paul Goode a senior analyst from M:Metrics. “TV
programmers around the globe have been seeking new ways to engage with their
audiences using various interactive platforms, and clearly, the British have
chosen to use their mobile phones, turning reality TV into a truly
cross-medium interactive event.”
M:Metrics measures the consumption of mobile content and applications and
benchmarks the performance of mobile operators, device manufacturers,
platform providers and publishers using a multi-dimensional methodology that
includes the largest monthly surveys of mobile subscribers in the U.S, the
U.K. and Germany. The following are the results of its Benchmark Surveys in
the U.K. and Germany for the quarter ending 31 January 2006.
www.mmetrics.com

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