Home News MDA Press Releases The Q1 2008 UK Mobile Trends Report
The Q1 2008 UK Mobile Trends Report Print E-mail

London, UK, 04 February 2008:  The Mobile Data Association (MDA) today launches the first UK Mobile Report, a comprehensive quarterly guide providing statistical analysis on current, historical and seasonal trends and growth factors in the use of mobile technology.

For Immediate Release: Monday 04 February 2008

Conditions Of Use: MDA to be credited as source.

Headline statistics

A summary of findings: A significantly wider variety of data usage has driven overall growth figures in 2007.  SMS growth remained strong but a combination of static and video messages and Internet usage has resulted in the following key statistics:

2007 annual figures

Text Messaging (SMS) total =   56,922,541,647
Picture Messaging (MMS) total = 448,962,359
Mobile Internet (MI) total users =  17,589,351

Seasonal figures

* All three key indicators surged in December:
o SMS volumes rose from 5.3 billion to 6 billion
o MMS from 37.8 million in October to 57.6 m in December
o MI users from 16.2 m to 17.58 m
* 290,334,846 text messages were sent on New Years Eve, 30% more than New Years Eve 2006
* 1,977,308 video and picture messages were sent on New Years Eve 2007
* From Christmas Eve to Boxing Day 6,466,506 video and picture messages were sent


Mobile Internet (MI)
* 17 million people accessed the Internet on their phone in December. This equates to 23% of mobile users in UK

Text Messaging (SMS)
* 6 billion text messages were sent in December 2007 - almost 5,000 every second
* 40% year on year growth in SMS volumes

Picture Messaging (MMS)
This is the first ever aggregation of MMS statistics from UK mobile operators and provides a clear indication of the interest UK consumers have in snapping and sending picture and video messages.  Camera phones have been available in the UK market for around five years, and unlike text messaging, not all UK handsets have picture and video capabilities enabled; this makes the headline statistics even more compelling and suggests significant MMS data growth as picture and video camera phone penetration increases.  The only viable benchmark that can be applied to assess MMS growth is the explosion of text messaging, which the MDA has been tracking for nine years.  It took six years for text messaging to reach the 1 billion per year mark.  MMS has today, after only five years and 50% penetration of camera phones, achieved 50% of this target already.

The MDA sees these statistics as a powerful indication and foundation for even further MMS growth in 2008 based on the ease of use to snap and send.

MMS headline statistics
* 55% growth of MMS messages sent in December 2007 (32 million sent in December 2006 Vs 58 million sent in December 2007)
* 448,962,359 MMS picture messages sent in 2007, the equivalent of 19 million traditional (24 exposure) rolls of camera film


Chairman's statements

Mike Short is Chairman of the Mobile Data Association.

Speaking about the key findings of the Q1 2008 Mobile Report, said:

"The report contains some very compelling indications that mobile usage is evolving.  While the strong upward curve of SMS volumes continues, perhaps a more telling headline number is the penetration of mobile Internet usage and multi-media messaging (MMS).  We are really starting to see a much greater variety of mobile data volumes.  New devices, competitive data tariffs and wider content choice mean it has never been easier for users to send an email, take a picture or access Internet content.  This is a very important set of indicators."

Speaking about the launch of the Q1 2008 UK Mobile Report he said:

"Within the mobile industry there remains a sustained hunger for market data and industry intelligence.  Mobile Data Association members benefit from our unique ability to aggregate data from all mobile operators.  Like economic forecasting, the data provides the clues and indicators to new directions and growth areas.   This quarterly benchmark report, the statistics and forecasts contained within provide a good indication for mobile trends in the coming year."

Speaking about general mobile industry growth he said:

"The mobile industry remains one of the fastest growing sectors throughout the world. Whether you look at Asia, India, Europe or the UK, the story is the same; mobile technology is enhancing and even shaping the way we live our daily lives."

 

The UK Mobile Report - Q1 2008 statistics in full


Text (SMS)
Total in 2007: 57 billion (2006 42 billion)
December: 6,077,828,808 (Dec 2006 3.795 billion)
December - first time over 6 billion in a single month
Number of Mobile Originated text messages in the UK

Picture Messaging (MMS) (This is the first year of measuring)
Total in 2007: 448.96 million
December: 57.62 million
Number of Mobile Originated picture messages in the UK including still and video messages

Mobile Internet (MI)
December: 17.59 million (Dec 2006 15.90 million)
Number of unique users accessing the Internet via a mobile device on UK networks

All three results surged in December:
SMS from 5.3 billion to 6 billion
MMS from 37.8 million to 57.6 million
MI users from 16.2 million to 17.59 million


Historical Analysis

SMS at http://www.text.it/mediacentre/sms_figures.cfm

Mobile Internet at http://www.text.it/mediacentre/wap_figures.cfm


Notes to Editors

  • The Mobile Data Association (MDA) was established in 1994 to increase awareness of mobile data amongst users and their advisers. The MDA acts as a focal point for its members, (vendors and users) and outside parties interested in knowing more about the industry
  • The MDA announces the total number of chargeable mobile originated Multi-Media (MMS) and text (SMS) messages sent on behalf of the UK GSM Network Operators together with the total number of active Mobile Internet users. For further information visit the MDA Messaging web site at www.text.it

Contact

For further information or to arrange an interview please contact Paul Doran at the MDA Press Office:
Tel: 0207 819 9333
Email: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
Web: http://www.themda.org  http://www.text.it