| Qumu Survey: Smartphones to Take Secret Videos |
| Monday, 10 October 2011 10:08 |
Qumu Survey: 50% of Americans Say They Would Use Smartphones to Take Secret Videos
Secretly recording people in embarrassing outfits was #1 choice
A majority of Americans think it would be funny or interesting if videos were shared at work
CTIA CONFERENCE, San Diego, Calif. — October 12, 2011 – Qumu, www.qumu.com, the leading business video platform provider, today announced the findings of its September 2011 survey of 2,361 Americans aged 18 and older, conducted online by Harris Interactive. The survey, which was drafted based on Qumu’s experience in mobile and tablet use in the workplace, discovered that 50% of Americans would use a smartphone to take a secret video. When asked which scenarios, if any, would Americans choose to record secretly, they revealed:
A majority of Americans (57%) say they would find it funny or interesting if a coworker was to share, upload, or post online a video in the workplace (e.g., on the company intranet or on the company shared files server). The number one video Americans might find funny or interesting if posted is of someone pulling a prank on a co-worker (30%), followed by someone imitating the boss (27%), a high-level executive being forced to make coffee (23%), someone napping on the job (21%), co-workers fooling around while thinking no one is watching (13%), a company party ending in inappropriate behavior (12%) and someone “pigging out” in the workplace kitchen (11%). Men are more likely to find any videos of these types of activities more funny or interesting than women (60% vs. 54%); especially those between the ages of 18-34 (25%) when it came to videos of co-workers fooling around while thinking no one was watching. To help companies adapt to the challenges posed by video, social media, and mobile use, Qumu is educating the enterprise about enabling video content to be centrally managed and also embedded in virtually any business application, portal or mobile app. The Qumu Video Platform includes both the Video Control Center 6.0 and its sister product VideoNet 2.0. The Qumu Video Platform enables the enterprise to manage, organize and securely distribute live and on-demand video to each desktop and every mobile viewer, such as iPads, iPhones and Android devices. “While everyone is excited about the latest smart phone, its capabilities pose a growing problem in the way video is consumed by employees,” said Ray Hood, CEO of Qumu. “At Qumu we provide the opportunity for employers to better control the way video is organized and distributed to employees. Not only can the Enterprise manage the growing volume of videos being created and viewed by its workforce, they can also monitor when employees have watched important videos and whether or not they watched the complete program. Qumu knows the future of business depends on video being consumed anytime, anywhere – a Video Powered Enterprise means providing the Freedom to work with existing infrastructure; the Power to reach all audiences; and the Control to do it right.” About Qumu
Video is pervasive – it appears in all business applications and is consumed on all devices. The largest Fortune 500 companies depend on Qumu’s video platform to capture, manage, and distribute live and on-demand content with total reliability and security. Regardless of audience size, viewer device, or network configuration, Qumu simply makes video work. Only Qumu delivers the Freedom to work with existing infrastructure; the Power to reach everyone; and the Control to do it right. Visit www.qumu.com Survey Methodology This survey was conducted online within the United States by Harris Interactive via its QuickQuery omnibus product on behalf of Qumu from September 21-23, 2011, among 2,361 adults ages 18 and older. This online survey is not based on a probability sample and therefore no estimate of theoretical sampling error can be calculated. For complete survey methodology, including weighting variables, please contact Curtis Sparrer at Grayling Connecting Point. All sample surveys and polls, whether or not they use probability sampling, are subject to multiple sources of error which are most often not possible to quantify or estimate, including sampling error, coverage error, error associated with nonresponse, error associated with question wording and response options, and post-survey weighting and adjustments. Therefore, Harris Interactive avoids the words “margin of error” as they are misleading. All that can be calculated are different possible sampling errors with different probabilities for pure, unweighted, random samples with 100% response rates. These are only theoretical because no published polls come close to this ideal. Press contact: Curtis Sparrer |
