From Radio Ink
September 18, 2008
About 17 percent of U.S. households with phones now have only a mobile phone, according to a new study from the Nielsen Co., and Nielsen thinks the figure could be up to 20 percent by the end of this year, as consumers try to cut household spending.
Cellphone-only households tend to have lower income levels, the study found, with 59 percent bringing in $40,000 or less a year, and homes with only one or two residents are more likely to abandon the landline than larger households. Read More…
Posted by Cheri on September 18, 2008
