Uptake of new services and smart home tech stalls
While the study highlights the resilience of the digital home, new services and emerging smart home products are still challenged by the pressure on household spending. Nearly half of households say the economic climate has made them less likely to pursue new connectivity and content experiences (43%) and adopt new technologies and gadgets for the home (48%). And 56% say pressure on finances has made them more likely to shop around for the best connectivity or content deals.
Similarly, penetration rates of more sophisticated home tech remain low. None of the 17 devices or products featured in the study (including smart security and digital home assistants) are currently owned by more than one in five households, and adoption levels are only increasing slightly year-on-year. Notably, attractive pricing is the No. 1 factor influencing consumers when choosing a smart home device (40%), with trust in the brand ranking closely behind (39%).
Platform overwhelm in a competitive streaming market
Competition between streaming services continues. As more services enter the market, there are signs of decision fatigue with 54% agreeing that they are faced with too much choice across platforms. Meanwhile, 20% of streamers indicate that they have canceled at least one monthly subscription in the previous 12 months, with 13% planning to cancel one or more in the future. The competitive landscape and spending pressures both feed into these decisions, with 45% citing cost savings as a reason to cancel, while 31% cite inadequate content or preference for alternative streaming services.
Network reliability fails to show material improvement
The study further highlights that network reliability continues to be a key pain point for consumers. More than a quarter of respondents (26%) say they experience an unreliable home broadband connection, down only slightly from 28% in each of the preceding two years. Perceptions around mobile data are more concerning: despite increasing 4G and 5G coverage levels, 29% indicate that they experience an unreliable mobile connection often or very often – up from 24% (2022) and 22% (2021). Overall, a third of households (33%) rank improving the reliability of their connection as the biggest service improvement their provider could make.