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Survey: Texting remains top consumer draw

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Almost three quarters of mobile phone users cite text messaging capabilities as the most important feature when purchasing a new handset, according to a consumer survey conducted by mobile solutions provider Access Systems Americas and independent research firm Amplitude Research. Given a list of 19 different mobile features and services, 73 percent of consumers cited texting as the most critical data component--cameras were second with 67 percent, followed by mobile email (63 percent) and web access (61 percent). Music (34 percent) and video (33 percent) also featured prominently in the poll. Conversely, only 0.5 percent of consumers said battery life plays a role in their phone purchase, with voice activation earning just 0.33 percent.

The Access survey also reports that 39 percent of respondents have added new applications to their handsets, with just over 21 percent adding six or more new apps. Forty-two percent of respondents cited stock tracking applications as the most necessary, followed by sports teams/game trackers (36.6 percent), business applications (10.3 percent), productivity apps (7.5 percent) and utilities (4.8 percent). Almost 40 percent of respondents said they use their cell phone for "alerts," e.g. traffic, weather and stock market updates. Nearly 30 percent of respondents said they use their phone for banking transactions or to check account balances.

For more on the Access/Amplitude survey:
- read this release

Related articles:
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Verizon, American Idol reach messaging milestones
Study: Users want practical mobile applications

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Comments

Your blurb about "Texting remains top consumer draw" misquotes the original article.

Stock trading and sports tracker apps were marked as the LEAST necessary apps by 42% of respondents, according to the survey:

"When cell phone users were asked to identify (from a list of nine items) the two cell phone applications that are not necessary to have, stock trackers (42%) and sports teams/games trackers (36.6%) were selected most often. "

You wrote "Forty-two percent of respondents cited stock tracking applications as the most necessary, followed by sports teams/game trackers."

So who is correct? Your statement is easier to believe, but the survey doesn't lie, right?

Cheers,
David

What was the sample size? The researchers don't mention this, so how valid is the survey?

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