Consumers See Birth of Cable Phone as Bundle of Joy; CTAM Pulse Survey Reveals Rise in Interest for Cable Phone Service.ALEXANDRIA, Va. -- For many Americans, getting more home technology from fewer places is a concept that rings loud and clear, according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. the latest Pulse survey commissioned by the Cable & Telecommunications Communicating information, including data, text, pictures, voice and video over long distance. See communications. Association for Marketing (CTAM CTAM Cable and Telecommunications Association for Marketing CTAM Cable Television Administration and Marketing Society CTAM Centralized Tuition Assistance Management (Army education) CTAM Climb to and Maintain ). According to the survey, a majority of consumers (57%) continue to be interested in bundling all telecommunications services In telecommunication, the term telecommunications service has the following meanings: 1. Any service provided by a telecommunication provider. 2. under a single provider. "The trend is clear. Consumers like the idea of one company delivering all of their entertainment, information and communications services - and they're seeing their cable companies as the source," said Char char: see salmon. char Any of several freshwater food and game fishes (genus Salvelinus) of the salmon family, distinguished from the similar trout by light, rather than black, spots; by a boat-shaped, rather than flat, vomer (bone) on the roof of Beales, President and CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board. of CTAM. "They realize that by bundling video, phone and Internet products, they can eliminate the inconvenience of dealing with multiple providers and reduce costs. It's music to their ears." Now more than ever, consumers are considering this new technology that is changing what it means to make a phone call in the 21st century. In fact, nearly one-third (29%) of digital and premium cable customers (32%) are interested in leaving their current telephone service provider to receive phone service from their cable company. Additionally, basic cable subscribers (23%) are more interested in phone service from their cable company than from a non-cable VoIP provider (11%). Consumer interest goes far beyond basic phone service: --Forty percent of basic cable customers are also interested in having their local cable company provide long distance --Half (50%) of basic cable customers are interested in local phone service (which marks a dramatic 13 percent increase compared to last year) --More than one-third (38%) of basic and 44 percent of digital cable customers are interested in cellular phone service from their cable company The Basics and Beyond The newest service in the cable roster, cable phone or digital voice services simply mean consumers get phone service using their reliable cable connection. What's the difference between cable phone and other phone services? Here's what consumers get with cable phone service: --All the same great features that one would expect from any residential telephone service, with no complicated calling plans --Cost savings right off the top, plus additional savings by bundling phone service with the other advanced services cable offers, such as high-speed Internet See broadband. and digital cable --Greater convenience: one connection for multiple services means one bill from one company --It's easy. The cable company installs a simple broadband broadband Term describing the radiation from a source that produces a broad, continuous spectrum of frequencies (contrasted with a laser, which produces a single frequency or very narrow range of frequencies). connector to your current phone system, and customers can call anyone, anywhere, regardless of their phone technology The CTAM Pulse surveys examine the latest trends in the entertainment and telecommunications arenas including home entertainment technologies, telephone and broadband services See broadband and broadband service provider. on a bi-monthly basis. This Pulse is based on a telephone survey conducted by Centris (Communications, Entertainment and Technology Research and Information Service) as part of their Access survey from April 20 to 27, 2005. The sample includes 1,013 randomly selected U.S. consumers aged 18 years of age or older. Sixty-five percent of weighted respondents In the context of marketing research, a representative sample drawn from a larger population of people from whom information is collected and used to develop or confirm marketing strategy. are cable customers, including 28% who have premium cable and 22% who have digital cable. Twenty five percent of respondents are satellite television customers. The study has a 3.1% margin of error. For more information on cable services, visit www.onlycablecan.com. The Cable & Telecommunications Association for Marketing (CTAM) is dedicated to helping the cable industry grow by advancing consumer and business-to-business marketing excellence, facilitating collaborative efforts, and encouraging the mastery of new technology-based products. CTAM supports its more than 5,300 members with conferences, consumer research, publications, Web sites, regional chapters, and the CTAM Educational Foundation's Executive Management Program at the Harvard Business School Harvard Business School, officially named the Harvard Business School: George F. Baker Foundation, and also known as HBS, is one of the graduate schools of Harvard University. . In addition, consumers can learn more about the benefits of cable through national CTAM initiatives, such as OnlyCableCan (SM). |
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