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Thursday, 05/08/2003 8:35:45 AM

Thursday, May 08, 2003 8:35:45 AM

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Nokia Launches its Latest Research on MMS Usage; Survey Shows Imaging
Capability to be Key Amongst Consumers
HELSINKI, Finland, May 8, 2003 (BUSINESS WIRE) -- Nokia today launched the latest market research on perceptions of existing and future Multimedia Messaging Service (MMS) -based mobile services in the United Kingdom, Japan, United States, Germany, Singapore and Finland.
The study, conducted in co-operation with The HPI Research Group, showed that the majority of respondents are excited by MMS which is set to ape the roaring success of SMS.
The vast majority of UK respondents - three-quarters - regard MMS as exciting. The positive expectations of users in the UK and other surveyed countries mirror actual mobile multimedia usage trends in Japan where these services are more developed than in the UK and the other four countries surveyed.
Among the research's key findings on UK perceptions was that the potential of downloadable picture-based services is greater than previously thought. UK respondents expressed great interest in downloadable services like travel information, news, games and screensavers. The study suggests that the popularity of these MMS-based services will capture traditional media spend for specific services - e.g. breaking news, travel, weather reports - from television, the Internet and other media.
Japanese multimedia usage illustrates how the proliferation of MMS phones with cameras will be critical to MMS going mass market. Amongst the Japanese respondents, over 90% of camera phone owners send multimedia messages to other camera phones; only 68% send to email accounts. For those sending MMS, it is important that they feel the recipient is able to open the image and share the moment immediately. With this in mind, Nokia has been at the forefront of bringing MMS and camera phones to the market globally. To date, Nokia has announced altogether five different phones with integrated camera and more than 15 MMS enabled color phone models.
The study highlights that in Japan respondents generally prefer richer types of services than those currently available. The Japanese research also confirmed that multimedia use is not replacing other types of mobile services. In fact, the Japanese respondents have increased their use of traditional mobile services since getting their current multimedia phone, and they expect to receive text or multimedia messages in response to multimedia messages they send. This suggests that MMS will build on and extend the successful SMS model that is helping to generate revenues for operators. The Japanese experience suggests that once MMS is adopted by users on a mass scale, it will create demand for much richer content services, paving the way for evolving 3G-based offerings.
The research supports Nokia's conviction that MMS will rapidly evolve into a true mass-market technology for both personal and professional use.
"Consumers really want MMS and, as operators are already discovering, people are as intrigued by and eager to use MMS as SMS. What's really interesting is how MMS looks set to broaden mobile communications use as a whole and support the creation of new kinds of picture content services," explains Pekka Pohjakallio, Director, Mobile Internet Solutions, Nokia Networks.
"The depth of demand for MMS services is extremely good news for the industry and creates a consumer pull for more advanced 3G-based services," he adds.
The research was carried out to gain a greater understanding of the development of the mobile data services market and of end-user attitudes towards MMS.
The study specifically looks at mobile data usage and perceptions including SMS and MMS and trends in content-to-person and person-to-person SMS and MMS services. The research used focus groups as well as a quantitative research element amongst 16 to 45 year old mobile phone users who do not yet have an MMS phone. In Japan, the research included mobile multimedia users of the same age to ascertain how multimedia-enabled phones change mobile communications behaviour. Users in all countries were surveyed about their perception of MMS and its features like photo messaging, video/audio clips and the Mobile Internet in relation to traditional media.
Nokia has among the wireless industry's most extensive track record in MMS with three out of four of the UK mobile operators and over 50 operators worldwide relying on Nokia Networks infrastructure for creating, delivering and developing their MMS services. Nokia is also taking the lead in providing services to help operators facilitate cross network MMS traffic.
Nokia is the world leader in mobile communications. Backed by its experience, innovation, user-friendliness and secure solutions, the company has become the leading supplier of mobile phones and a leading supplier of mobile, fixed broadband and IP networks. By adding mobility to the Internet Nokia creates new opportunities for companies and further enriches the daily lives of people. Nokia is a broadly held company with listings on six major exchanges.
SOURCE: Nokia


CONTACT: Nokia Networks Global Communications Department, + 358 (0) 7180 38198 networks.communications@nokia.com www.nokia.comURL: http://www.businesswire.comToday's News On The Net - Business Wire's full file on the Internetwith Hyperlinks to your home page.
Copyright (C) 2003 Business Wire. All rights reserved.
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KEYWORD: FINLAND INTERNATIONAL EUROPEINDUSTRY KEYWORD: TELECOMMUNICATIONS NETWORKING E-COMMERCE INTERNET COMPUTERS/ELECTRONICS


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