Add Your Podcast | Feedback/Suggestions | Search
Podcasting News
Podcasting News Home | Audio & Music News | Articles | Podcast Directory | Forum | Podcasting Gear | Podcasting Gear Manufacturers

Popular Pages

New Podcasts

Top 25 Podcasts

Top Rated Podcasts

Search for a Podcast

100 Most Recent Podcasts

Podcasting Jobs

31 Days of Free Music

 

Check out Some Podcasts!

Baby Time

Collected Comics Library

Distorted View Daily

The Dorktones

E-Auction-Air

Field Position

The Guy Bauer Half Hour

IT Conversations

Jason and Gary

The John Edwards Podcast

Karins Themed Songs Podcast

The Living Word

LunchCast

The Mary and Karla Show

Molar Radio

PaulC Music

Podcast Who

Post Modern Rock

Radio Filibuster

SETI Science and Skepticism

The Steve Vitolo Show

The View from Here

Ultima Thule

You are the Guest

 

See Your Podcast Featured!

Resource Pages

Add Your Podcast

iPod

Mactel Podcasting Applications

Mobilecasting - Mobile Podcasting

MP3 Players

Podcast Directory List

Podcast Hosts

Podcast Software (Clients)

Podcasting FAQ

Podcasting Glossary

Podcasting Resources and Services

Podcasting Software (Publishing)

Podcast-Legal Music

Podcasts

Press Info

Promote Your Podcast!

Syndicating Podcasting News

Video iPod Software

 

Podcast Directory Top Categories

Arts & Humanities

Audio Blogs

Audio Books

BBC Podcasts

Business Podcasts

Computers & Internet

Education

Entertainment

General

Government

Health

International

Japanese Podcasts

Music Podcasts

News and Media

NPR Podcasts

Recreation & Sports

Regional Podcasts

Science

Social Science

Society & Culture

UK Podcasts

Video Podcasts

 

Links

DopplerRadio

Feed Validator

IndieFeed

iPodderX

iPodLounge

jPodder

Nimiq

OpenPodcast

Podcast Feed Debugger

Prime Time Podcast

RSSRadio

Video Podcasting News

 

Free Banners!

 

 

 

Got a tip?

spacer

If you have a information on a new podcast, podcast software or hardware, or anything else related to podcasting, let us know!

 

Site Info

Advertising on Podcasting News

 


 

« Open Source Podcast Application Loudblog Released | Main | iPod Sales Push Apple Income Up 500% »

Forrester Calls Podcasting "The Future of Digital Audio"

April 12, 2005

Forrester Research has released a new report, The Future Of Digital Audio, that focuses on podcasting and satellite radio. According to the report, 20.1 million U.S. households will listen to satellite radio and 12.3 million U.S. households will use their MP3 players to listen to audio podcasts by the end of the decade.

"Consumers want to listen to what they want, when they want, on the device of their choosing. New formats like online radio and podcasting, where downloadable content is sent directly to an MP3 player, give consumers more programming and ultimate flexibility," says Forrester Research Vice President Ted Schadler. "If radio and music executives can successfully shift their thinking to embrace new audio delivery methods, both industries will benefit from new revenue streams and increased consumer loyalty over the next several years."

According to Forrester, music and radio executives must adopt subscription-based models, on-demand delivery, and ad targeting strategies for radio to successfully maximize its new formats. For example, in addition to rolling out high-definition (HD) radio, broadcasters like Clear Channel and Infinity Broadcasting should move quickly to both ad- and subscription-supported online delivery and subscription-based programming and services to HD receivers to accommodate varied consumer demand.

The radio industry will also contend with increased ad skipping as the adoption of TiVo-like digital radio recorders (DRR) increases. Improved ad measurement capabilities online and offline will ease some of the ad industry's concerns by enabling it to target specific listeners.

The Future Of Digital Audio includes a forecast of US digital audio adoption 2004 to 2010. Sample data points and analysis include:

Satellite radio reached 4.5 million subscribers by the end of 2004, up more than 150 percent from 2003. In order to grow steadily beyond 2010, when satellite's prime market segment (higher-income, entertainment-oriented, technology-optimistic households) will become saturated, satellite radio providers should consider offering multi-tier subscriptions, to reach the more than 85 percent of US households that fall outside this wealthier, early-adopter segment.

Online radio (streaming audio) will continue to grow as portals like AOL, Yahoo!, and MSN increase programming and traditional broadcasters move portions of their programming online, reaching 30 percent of all US households and close to 50 percent of US households with broadband by 2010.

Podcasting, which is the newest entrant into the digital audio mix, will see significant growth by 2010 -- reaching 12.3 million households, as MP3 adoption climbs and broadband reaches 62 percent of households.

HD radio will bring high-definition broadcasting to AM/FM radio, offering additional programming and features like traffic information integrated with onboard navigation systems and program guides that give DVR-like control to radio. HD radio growth will lag satellite but will pick up speed as broadcasters embrace the technology and HD receivers drop in price. Forrester estimates that HD radio will reach 9.7 million US households by 2010.

Comments

It is difficult to think in terms of "households reached" if the majority of podcasts are consumed on personal devices (ipod, cell phone). Also, Adam Curry mentions in the podcast strategy call (http://radio.weblogs.com/0001014/categories/dailySourceCode/2005/04/29.html) that there are currently 6 million podcast listeners - hard to believe that this number will only double by the end of the decade.

Posted by: Thomas at May 13, 2005 12:50 PM

Thomas

That 6 million number comes from Pew Internet, and is based on a very broad definition of what podcasting is.

They basically asked people if they had ever downloaded stuff to listen to on an iPod, and if so, they counted that as having tried podcasts.

While Pew's methodology and numbers may be accurate, their results are not particularly meaningful to many in the podcasting community, because their definition of a podcast is so broad.

Estimates of the podcast audience that have come from the podcasting community are closer to the 250,000 - 500,000 range. This seems much more plausible, since the most popular podcasts are claiming downloads in the 50,000 range.

When you see these numbers, check out what they represent - not everybody agrees on their definitions!

Posted by: jlewin [TypeKey Profile Page] at May 13, 2005 01:51 PM

Post a comment




Remember Me?