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New Ericsson ConsumerLab report: As citizens turn smart, so will the cities they inhabit


WEBWIRE
  • A new study from ConsumerLab on shows how the internet facilitates smart choices in city life, covering 9 cities worldwide: Beijing, Delhi, London, New York, Paris, Rome, São Paulo, Stockholm and Tokyo
  • Key finding: When city dwellers use the internet to make smarter, more informed choices, cities become smarter too. Smartphone owners in cities globally are now making this happen
  • Citizens want to use their smartphones to alleviate concerns with health, improve communication with authorities, and navigate urban traffic. As these changes would be retrofitted over existing structures, smart citizens want current players to internet-enable their services


Ericsson (NASDAQ:ERIC) today published its latest ConsumerLab report, entitled “Smart Citizens: How the internet facilitates smart choices in city life.”

The study covers 9 cities worldwide-Beijing, Delhi, London, New York, Paris, Rome, São Paulo, Stockholm and Tokyo-and explores how as citizens become smarter, so do the cities they inhabit. The report explores different concepts that will enable people to take a more proactive and participatory role in city life, from digital health monitoring to interactive road navigation and social bike and car sharing.

Michael Björn, Head of Research at Ericsson ConsumerLab, says: “Citizens want current players to internet-enable their services. This means for example that city authorities are expected to provide ICT services related to traffic, public services and water quality.”

He adds: “Interestingly, for all the concepts tested, citizens who live in the central parts of the cities are more interested in the concepts than those who live in suburbs. Also, the young and full time workers are those with the overall highest predicted daily use of the concepts, and the ones who will most actively push cities to grow smarter.”

Looking at the city-specific findings, he says: “Delhi, Beijing and São Paulo score very high on usefulness ratings for all concepts we tested-whereas Paris, London and Stockholm score significantly lower. For example, only 41 percent in Stockholm-a city known for its great drinking water quality-find the water quality checker concept to be of use, compared to 92 percent for Delhi.”

This study was conducted online in September 2014 with 9,030 iPhone and Android smartphone users aged between 15 and 69. Respondents were from Beijing, Delhi, London, New York, Paris, Rome, São Paulo, Stockholm and Tokyo, representing 61 million citizens. Written statements outlining the concepts tested were rotated so that each respondent saw two thirds of all services.

Ericsson ConsumerLab is a global consumer research unit that studies consumer use of, and attitudes to, ICT in more than 40 countries annually. As Ericsson’s voice of the consumer externally and internally, Ericsson ConsumerLab helps customers as well as industry organizations and policy makers to understand the implications of consumer needs.

NOTES TO EDITORS

Read the report: Smart Citizens: How the internet facilitates smart choices in city life

View the presentation on SlideShare

More information about ConsumerLab

Download high-resolution photos and broadcast-quality video at www.ericsson.com/press
Ericsson is the driving force behind the Networked Society - a world leader in communications technology and services. Our long-term relationships with every major telecom operator in the world allow people, businesses and societies to fulfill their potential and create a more sustainable future.

Our services, software and infrastructure - especially in mobility, broadband and the cloud - are enabling the telecom industry and other sectors to do better business, increase efficiency, improve the user experience and capture new opportunities.

With more than 110,000 professionals and customers in 180 countries, we combine global scale with technology and services leadership. We support networks that connect more than 2.5 billion subscribers. Forty percent of the world’s mobile traffic is carried over Ericsson networks. And our investments in research and development ensure that our solutions - and our customers - stay in front.   

Founded in 1876, Ericsson has its headquarters in Stockholm, Sweden. Net sales in 2013 were SEK 227.4 billion (USD 34.9 billion). Ericsson is listed on NASDAQ OMX stock exchange in Stockholm and the NASDAQ in New York.

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