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Sunday, June 15, 2014

7 surprising charts about technology and media today 06-15

7 surprising charts about technology and media today


Mary Meeker of Kleiner Perkins Caufield Byers put together this big presentation on investment opportunities in the contemporary technology space. It contains a number of fascinating charts mixed in with the bullet points and such. These seven are the most striking and important, not just from an investment point of view but simply as a way to understand the world we're really living in today.

1. There's no sign of a bubble in VC funding

Screen_shot_2014-05-31_at_4.37.51_pmNeither the number of companies getting funding nor the total amount of funding offered is particularly unusual.

2. Mobile punches way below its weight in ad spending

Screen_shot_2014-05-31_at_4.51.38_pmTV and especially print continue to attract a level of ad spending that's out of proportion to audience engagement. Meanwhile, everyone's glued to their phones all the time and nobody's ponying up money to reach them.

3. IPO's still haven't really recovered from the financial crisis

Screen_shot_2014-05-31_at_4.55.06_pm
Forget the dot-com boom. Except for the huge 2012 Facebook IPO, we still aren't back to where we were before the financial crisis.

4. Streaming is the new owning

Screen_shot_2014-05-31_at_4.59.33_pm
Even the relatively new technology of digital music downloads is already in decline in the face of the streaming juggernaut.

5. Smartphones are getting really cheap

Screen_shot_2014-05-31_at_5.02.06_pm
US media coverage continues to be dominated by the top-end phones from Apple and Samsung, but globally average prices are falling and smartphone technology is becoming accessible to more and more people in low- and middle-income countries.

6. Smartphones are insanely popular

Screen_shot_2014-05-31_at_5.06.19_pm
There were a series of "tablets are dead" stories earlier this year when it became clear that tablets are much less popular than smartphones, but in context it's clear that this is about the appeal of phones rather than the lack of appeal of tablets.

7. America isn't indispensable

Screen_shot_2014-05-31_at_5.12.19_pmFour of the top ten internet properties don't exist in the United States at all.

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