Both Formats Will Grow

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  • ed klein
    Banned
    • Mar 2004
    • 880

    Both Formats Will Grow

    Futurists: Both formats will grow

    HOME MEDIA EXPO: Consumers still confused about Blu-ray, HD DVD

    JULY 18 | LAS VEGAS—Both HD DVD and Blu-ray Disc will have a place in home entertainment’s future and a big one at that, according to research presented at Wednesday panel “The Future of Retail and Home Entertainment” at the Home Media Expo here.

    By 2012, high-definition DVD will reach $10 billion in annual sales, surpassing DVD sales, which are expected at $8 billion, according to Adams Media Research projections. Adams believes that high-def sales will be split equally between HD DVD and Blu-ray.

    Firm principal Tom Adams said the industry is “slowly getting used to the idea that Toshiba’s not going away.”

    But high-def DVD won’t grow as fast as standard DVD did. Part of the problem is a lack of consumer high-def knowledge.

    “Consumers are entirely confused,” said Russ Crupnick, NPD movies and music analyst. NPD research shows that 10% of consumers think they already have a high-def player, while research says that closer to 1% actually do.

    One of the complaints of consumers is that they don’t understand why they should upgrade to high-def. “More than price, people don’t see a big difference,” he said.

    Crupnick said there’s an opportunity for smaller retailers to educate consumers about high-def, but he cautioned them away from heavily investing in it, saying many consumers will buy players and high-def movies at big box stores.

    The typical high-def consumer is male, ages 18 to 34, reads men’s magazines such as Maxim, probably owns an iPod, drinks imported beer and makes most of his movie purchases at electronics and game specialty stores, according to Nielsen Media Research.

    Other new technologies such as movie downloading and video-on-demand are expected to grow in the next five years, but not as fast as high-definition. Adams projects that movie downloads could reach $160 million in revenue this year, but he said that is optimistic.

    Crupnick said NPD has seen a significant drop in movie downloads in the last year.

    DVD sales continue to be an important part of the business.

    The most important thing retailers can do is focus on customer service. Crupnick suggested retailers look at what companies that score high on customer satisfaction are doing, such as Amazon and Netflix.

    Music consumers, who behave similarly to movie consumers, shop an average of five stores for media, according NPD. Over the last three years, consumers have shifted where they are buying DVDs. Between January and May 2004, 54% bought discs at video stores, compared with 42% this year. Purchases at online stores doubled in the same period, from 11% to 21%.

    Store loyalty, he said, is a thing of the past.

    But consumers are buying more DVDs at video specialty stores, according to Nielsen. In 2006, 28% of video purchases were made at specialty stores, up from 23.4% the prior year. DVD purchases at Wal-Mart slid from 21% to 17%.

    At an afternoon panel about DVD manufacturing on-demand, execs from MOD companies said the business is just getting started, but it may offer opportunities for retailers to carry a broader range of content.

    Amazon CustomFlix VP of content acquisitions Larry Smith said at his company, some smaller titles sell one or two copies, while others can sell even more.

    Workout video You On a Diet: The Workout sold enough to make it the No. 7 top DVD seller on Amazon at one point.

  • RFBurns
    To Infinity And Byond
    • May 2006
    • 499

    #2
    This is one example of the forthcomming "resolution confusion".

    What these marketing execs dont get is that consumers are not going to waste time with choosing between one form of HD disc vs another, they just want their systems to work and movies playback in HD. They could care less if its Blu-Ray, purple-ray or DVD-HD.

    When you get different formats into the mix, you get a mix of mass confusion because the average consumer does not know or care about the miniscule technical differences yet supposed to yield the same high resolution playback. In their minds, why have two or more different formats for hi-def when all you need is 1.

    Just wait till the big switch is turned off on SDTV, the big time.


    Here..I will fix it!

    Sony Digital Video and Still camera CCD imager service

    MCM Video Stabalizer

    Comment

    • admin
      Administrator
      • Nov 2001
      • 8946

      #3
      If the two competing camps don't come together to unify the format, then the market will have to do it for them, and we can all help. Just tell everyone you can that if they want to buy a high def DVD player (or recorder), make sure they buy only a multi-format one. No multi-format, no buy!

      If the majority of consumers have multi-format players, it won't be long before studios realise there's no point in going format exclusive, and then the format war will be all but over.
      Visit Digital Digest and dvdloc8.com, My Blog

      Comment

      • NightTran
        King of Digital Video
        King of Digital Video
        • Aug 2005
        • 4224

        #4
        I wont buy either one unless DVD go obsolete, got to be under 100 for internal
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