Connect with us

MAM

C&S penetration grows 53% to 61 million homes in 3 years: NRS 2005

Published

on

MUMBAI: Cable and Satellite penetration has increased by 53 per cent to 61 million homes in 2005, up from 40 million homes in 2002, according to the findings of the National Readership Study (NRS) 2005.

Television now reaches 108 million homes, which means it has crossed the 50 per cent mark of all homes for the first time, thus reflecting a growth of 32 per cent since 2002. Additionally, 56 per cent of all TV homes in India have C&S subscription.

 

Advertisement

 
The study revealed that the reach of satellite television has grown by leaps and bounds from 134 million individuals watching TV in an average week in 2002 to as many as 190 million individuals in 2005.

Tamil Nadu and Andhra Pradesh have the highest C&S penetration (55 per cent each), followed by Karnataka (45 per cent).

Tamil Nadu has the highest TV reach of 77 per cent, whereas Andhra Pradesh has a 74 per cent reach. Karnataka, on the other hand, has a TV reach of 68 per cent.

Advertisement

 
 
Interestingly, two-thirds (70 per cent) of C&S homes have colour TV today. In 2002, only a little over half the C&S homes had colour TV. The growth of colour televisions have outstripped even the rapid C&S growth. Homes with colour TV have doubled to 58 million in 2005.

 
 
Internet reach has now exceeded the 10 million mark. The number of individuals aged 12 years and above who accessed the Internet in the last three months increased to 11 million in 2005. While 8 million of these are in urban India, close to 3 million Internet users reside in rural India.

Radio’s reach has stagnated at 23 per cent of the population listening to any station in the average week. It has improved its performance in urban India (23 per cent listen to radio as compared to 20 per cent three years ago) primarily due to FM. In rural areas, the reach has dropped from 25 per cent three years ago to 23 per cent this year.

Advertisement

Among the 183 million adults who listened to radio in the last three months, 43 per cent or 96.8 million, now tune on to any FM station, thus leading to an increase of more than 100 per cent over 2002. Also notable is the fact that FM has a larger audience base than Vividh Bharati (15.7 per cent compared to 11.3 per cent) in urban India.

Mobile phones have also emerged as a new medium. Almost 13.9 per cent mobile phone owners access value added features like downloads, accessing news and cricket scores, SMS etc. In the 35 metros that the survey covered, this figure stands higher at 24.7 per cent.

The NRS 2005 survey covered 261,212 respondents in India. NRSC research professional Kedernath Sharma, technical advisor Dr Shridhar and audit firm Ernst & Young were instrumental in the efforts behind the study. AC Nielsen was appointed as the research agency and significant improvements in design and methodology were made in order to yield robust readership estimates.

Advertisement
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

MAM

Sleepwell unveils nationwide sleep study on World Sleep Day

79 per cent use screens before bed, 36 per cent of 18–25-year-olds sleep ≤5 hours.

Published

on

MUMBAI: Sleepwell just dropped the pillow truth bomb because when India’s sleeping less and scrolling more, even the mattress wants to stage an intervention. On World Sleep Day 2026, Sleepwell released its nationwide Sleep Study, painting a stark picture of India’s escalating sleep crisis. The findings show that 79% of Indians use screens right before bed, fuelling restless nights and drowsy days. Alarmingly, 36% of young adults aged 18–25 sleep five hours or less making them the country’s most sleep-deprived group.

The study also busts the myth of “catch-up sleep”, 65% of respondents actually sleep even later on weekends, pointing to increasingly irregular patterns that spill fatigue into the working week. Mattress discomfort emerged as a frequently overlooked culprit behind late-night wake-ups and constant leak-anxiety checks.

To drive the message home, Sleepwell’s CMO Puneet Gulati appeared on Zee Business, stressing that quality sleep isn’t a luxury, it’s foundational health. He highlighted how the right mattress can transform restless nights into restorative ones.

Advertisement

The brand doubled down with clever late-night activations, partnering with a quick-commerce platform to serve contextual ads between 11 pm and 3 am, gently nudging bleary-eyed scrollers to consider mattress discomfort as the reason they’re still awake and pointing them to the nearest Sleepwell store. Digital influencers and creators also shared relatable stories of how poor sleep fuels impulsive late-night behaviour.

In a nation that celebrates hustle but quietly pays for it in lost rest, Sleepwell isn’t just selling mattresses, it’s selling the radical idea that sometimes the bravest thing you can do is close your eyes and actually sleep well.

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Advertisement News18
Advertisement All three Media
Advertisement Whtasapp
Advertisement Year Enders

Copyright © 2026 Indian Television Dot Com PVT LTD

This will close in 10 seconds