Emily Tan
Apr 27, 2012

People in Asia-Pacific addicted to mobile over TV and computers: InMobi

GLOBAL – Consumers in Southeast Asia prefer consuming media on their mobile phones more than any other medium with consumers in Singapore, Indonesia, Thailand and Vietnam all choosing mobile, compared with the global average and China where computers still trump mobile, according to a study by InMobi.

Mobile the most influential medium on purchase decisions
Mobile the most influential medium on purchase decisions

These findings were based on a mobile media survey that was conducted in partnership with marketing insights firm Decision Fuel. The study covered 20 key markets across Asia, Africa, Europe, North and Latin America, surveying 20,000 consumers overall.

On average, global consumers who have web-capable phones spend 7.2 hours, or 27 per cent of overall media consumption, on mobiles a day consuming media. This puts mobile media consumption ahead of TV (98 minutes) and just after computers (140 minutes).

This is reflected in China where users spend more time on their phones (105 minutes or 34 per cent of their time) than TV (54 minutes) but less than on their computers (107 minutes).

In Southeast Asia however, mobile comes out tops with consumers spending more time consuming media on their phones than computers in Singapore (30 per cent of total time spent consuming media), Indonesia (36 per cent), Thailand (27 per cent) and Vietnam (35 per cent).

They’re also using their mobiles everywhere with 67 per cent of global consumers using their phones in bed, while waiting (47 per cent) while watching TV (39 per cent) and even in the bathroom (19 per cent).

Globally, and in the Southeast Asian nations, the top two activities consumers are using their mobiles for is social media and entertainment, in that order. In China however, entertainment is the activity for mobile phone use (24 per cent) followed by games (24 per cent), with social media in third place (16 per cent).

Perhaps most interesting for advertisers is that besides China, the average global consumer and Southeast Asian consumer regard mobile advertising as having the most impact on their purchasing decision. Globally, 48 per cent of consumers regard mobile advertising as having more impact than online advertising (47 per cent) and TV (46 per cent). In China, online advertising trumps mobile by more than double with 76 per cent. Mobile (34 per cent) and TV (28 per cent) are regarded as having significantly less impact on their purchase decisions.

Globally, 42 per cent of consumers said that they have been introduced to something new via their mobile phones, 13 per cent said something they’d researched or viewed on their mobile caused them to reconsider a product and 14 per cent were influenced to buy something via their mobile.

Source:
Campaign Asia

Related Articles

Just Published

1 hour ago

Agency Report Card 2024: Publicis Media

Publicis Media came in swinging in 2024—snagging big-name clients, racking up awards and riding a wave of regional growth. But with rivals regrouping and the AI race tightening, the fight for APAC dominance is far from over.

1 hour ago

How a Chinese gold brand is glittering from the 618 ...

Laopu Gold posted impressive sales figures during the 618 shopping festival, setting the potential for further growth and brand expansion by tapping Chinese cultural identity.

1 hour ago

Uber launches 'Ride Offers' letting brands pay for ...

As part of its expanding ad portfolio, Uber has introduced Ride Offers, a feature that rewards riders with ride discounts when they engage with targeted adverts in the app.

2 days ago

'Looking for the first domino': Titanium jury ...

In a wide-ranging interview, John explains how APAC work, like New Zealand’s stigma-smashing Grand Prix for Good and Ogilvy Singapore’s work for Vaseline, are setting the stage for global creative change.