Trend Report

How Whole-Home Audio Products Can Find Their Rhythm

 and  two contributors
Jan 30, 2009

Summary

Over the past three years, a few whole-home audio devices have trickled into the marketplace from companies like Logitech and Sonos, offering consumers the ability to listen to digital content from their PCs or from the Internet in various rooms of their home. Unlike the conceptually similar MP3 player market, this audio device market has not hit the top of the charts. However, this could change in 2009 and beyond. At 28%, enough US homes are now networked to make whole-home audio feasible. Plus, music labels have freed the music from the complex constraints of previous DRM schemes. The secret, as Forrester's Convenience Quotient ranking methodology reveals, is the degree of convenience these devices can offer — not just compared with each other but in comparison with other ways to get the same benefits of whole-home listening.

Log in to continue reading
Client log in
Welcome back. Log in to your account to continue reading this research.
Become a client
Become a client today for these benefits:
  • Stay ahead of changing market and customer dynamics with the latest insights.
  • Partner with expert analysts to make progress on your top initiatives.
  • Get answers from trusted research using Izola, Forrester's genAI tool.
Purchase this report
This report is available for individual purchase ($1495).