A new market snapshot by Parks Associates reveals 50% of consumers who try a VR (virtual reality) headset enjoy it and make plans to purchase one, while 15% who try one enjoy the experience and then buy a headset.
This research, from Consumer Strategies and Use Cases for Virtual and Augmented Reality, highlights the importance of personal experience in driving the success of virtual reality headset sales and the need to expand demos beyond industry events such as CES® and into retail settings, especially during the holiday shopping season. At last year’s CES, VR headsets and hardware drew attention, but this year, content and apps will be the focus for the technology.
“VR and AR (augmented reality) technologies have great potential but are in the very earliest stages of their market lifecycle. VR headsets have only recently entered the consumer market, and 360-degree and VR content production is just beginning. Content creators are still in the process of finding the best ways to use VR to tell stories and generate revenues. Currently, more than 60% of U.S. broadband households claim to know little or nothing about virtual reality,” said Brett Sappington, senior director of research, Parks Associates.
“Despite a boost in awareness in 2016, AR consumer applications remain more of an opportunity than commercial reality. Industry players must create the appropriate ecosystems for each, including platforms, software, content, distribution, and delivery systems, in order for them to be viable in the marketplace.”
Parks Associates notes 3.5% of US broadband households, or roughly 3.4 million households, own a virtual reality headset. The top use cases for VR include gaming, healthcare, live events such as concerts or sporting events, social interaction, marketing, and education.
“Gaming is a strong use case for VR and AR technologies,” said Hunter Sappington, research analyst, Parks Associates. “PlayStation VR, launched by Sony in October, was a high-profile entry for VR, while the app Pokémon Go exposed lots of smartphone users, and news organizations, to AR. However, to find success beyond the Pokémon Go phenomenon, the industry needs to forge more content partnerships.”