Apps main reason to buy smartphones

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The main reason for buying a smartphone is to gain access to mobile apps, according to Ericsson Consume Lab's Emerging App Culture report.

The report, which looks at the high growth markets of Russia, India and Brazil, reveals that new smartphone users embrace apps at the same pace as mature users. In addition, 69% of smartphone users in the survey accessed internet using apps on a daily basis and 20% used data-intensive services like video, TV, maps or navigation apps daily.

Top 10 activities performed by consumers who have recently purchased a smartphone, starting with the most popular, are: check in to locations; use maps for navigation or traffic info; watch internet TV; watch movies; play online games; watch streaming video; play games on social networking sites; watch live news; use Twitter; and read/write blogs.

For consumers, being connected and having access to tools and services is what matters. They make little distinction between having a smartphone and the apps they use in it. However, mobile apps are used differently across the three markets, with Indian smartphone users more interested in downloading personalisation apps, such as screen savers, live wallpapers and themes, and third party browsers apart from social media apps and games.

On the other hand Russians put their smartphones to more utilitarian use and use apps that benefit the flow of their everyday lives, such as those for navigation and maps, shopping comparisons, barcode scanners, translators, dictionaries and so on. The Brazilians use apps that enhance their social interactions.

Jasmeet Singh Sethi, senior specialist, Ericsson ConsumerLab, said: 'The app culture emerging in these high growth markets reflects a trend similar to that in the US and other parts of the developed world. Apps are no longer only for early adopters. Although mature users use their apps more frequently than new users of smartphones, we see a general evolution toward new users purchasing increasingly specialized apps, such as those for dating services and price comparison, from the moment they get their smartphones. Usage of these specialised apps is almost as high among new users as it is among mature users.'

Some app usage characteristics differ compared to mature markets. Two out of five users rarely or never visit an official app marketplace and instead download apps from third party sites and forums. Around half of the users downloaded apps on PC first and then transferred them to smartphone's to save on data limits.

In terms of respondents' daily app usage, 49% reported using apps for social networking, 39% for chat, 31% for weather forecasts, 26% for news, 20% for maps, GPS and navigation, and 12% for timetables and traffic.

'These figures reveal strong interest in apps that enable consumers to deal with daily challenges and interact with people, places and things in their urban surroundings. We believe that smartphones and apps will be key in transforming everyday life for people in high growth markets going forward into the Networked Society,' added Sethi.

The research was carried out among smartphone users between the ages of 15 and 54 who accessed the internet using their smartphones at least once a week in the three key markets.

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