1 in 5 Drops their Phone in the Toilet. Hope It’s Just Your Data that’s Backed Up.
Not too long ago, a Pew Internet Project survey revealed that one third of American adults (35 percent) owns a smartphone. Now, Plaxo, creator of a universal address book, digs a little deeper into our smartphone behavior in its recently released Mobile & Online Backup Trends Study, centering on how smartphone users in the US utilize online backup tools and interact with their contacts. It covered demographics Gen Y, Gen X, Baby Boomers and the Greatest Generation.
“Living a mobile-ready lifestyle in both one’s professional and personal lives requires having information at your fingertips,” said Preston Smalley, general manager for Plaxo.
“These survey results reinforce the trend around an increasingly untethered world. Even though people are on the go more and more, they have not lowered their expectations around access to their latest updated data including their address book, and in fact, have increased expectations. Plaxo recognizes these market trends and offers innovative mobile services so people can find and reach those who are important to them. We take things a step further by actually automatically updating address book content with our new line of services.”
Users keep their contact information in more places than one –including PCs, laptops, smartphones, emails and social networks– with 71 percent of these contacts stored in their smartphones. Just about half of the respondents said they rely on remote access for their contacts and address more in the last three years than they did in the previous years, and two-fifths of them said they are likely to rely further on remote access over the next two years. The survey also reveals that 66 percent of mobile users do not segregate their professional and personal address book.
And I agree with the 55 percent who said that the most hassling aftermath of losing a phone is losing one’s contacts along with it – above photos, documents/emails, apps, calendar and music. Moreover, the survey says that one in five has lost smartphone data by dropping it in the toilet (first-class clumsiness). 68 percent of the sample population tends to back up their personal computers more than any other device, which brings us to why only 1 in 10 considers avoiding the hassle of losing their address book ‘priceless.’ Those who back up their data to the cloud are likely to back up their contact/address book info on their smartphones as well, compared to those who don’t back up their computer data at all.
Gen Y (21-31 years old) tends to rely on tools and apps that support remote access to contacts, and are seeing an augmented confidence in it over the next two years.
Plaxo currently offers native apps on iPhone, BlackBerry, and Windows Mobile, and will have one for Android as well by the end of Q3. Plaxo greatly complements social networks and media companies by helping users assimilate their contacts across different internet assembly points (Facebook, LinkedIn, Outlook etc.) into one secure online address book.
In other data backup news, Mozy, another online backup leader, has recently launched a free mobile app to provide commercial users safe, secure and protected access to file from Android and iOS devices. The pro version of the app offers the benefit of other Mobile Mozy applications as well. We also have Dropbox changing their Terms of Service because of growing security concerns. It’s amazing how the cloud changed the way users –commercial and individuals alike—backup their data. Cloud storage was one of those preposterous ideas that paved the way to the metamorphosis of the internet.
A message from John Furrier, co-founder of SiliconANGLE:
Your vote of support is important to us and it helps us keep the content FREE.
One click below supports our mission to provide free, deep, and relevant content.
Join our community on YouTube
Join the community that includes more than 15,000 #CubeAlumni experts, including Amazon.com CEO Andy Jassy, Dell Technologies founder and CEO Michael Dell, Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger, and many more luminaries and experts.
THANK YOU