Jongeren meer op Internet dan voor TV
Uit een recente studie van Harris Interactive blijkt dat jongeren tussen 13-24 jaar gemiddeld 16,7 uur/week online zijn terwijl ze slechts 13,6 uur/week TV kijken. Met name de interactiviteit en de mogelijkheid om te communiceren met vrienden zijn de belangrijkste redenen voor deze opmerkelijke verschuiving in mediaconsumptie onder jongeren.
When it comes to kids, the web wins. Yahoo! Inc. and Carat North America, one of the largest independent media services company in North America, yesterday announced the results of a research study commissioned by both companies, which reveals new findings about media consumption by teens and young adults (ages 13-24). Among the key findings of the two-phased market research program conducted by Harris Interactive and Teenage Research Unlimited (TRU), was that the Internet has surpassed television in overall time spent to become the primary medium of choice among the young. Additional findings show the younger generation uses the Internet as their media “hub” and they feel empowered by the abundant media choices available to them.
The results of the study were announced today at “Born to be Wired: Understanding the First Wired Generation,” Yahoo!‘s conference for marketers, which is designed to further explore and understand the media consumption patterns of teens and young adults, and how marketers can best communicate with this group.
Born to Be Wired
While teens and young adults consume many different types of media, the study revealed that the Internet surpasses them all in the amount of time spent, which in an average week is as follows: (1) 16.7 hours online (excluding email), (2) 13.6 hours watching TV, (3) 12 hours listening to the radio, (4) 7.7 hours talking on the phone, (5) Six hours reading books and magazines (personal, not scholastic).
The study, which polled more than 2,500 teens and young adults (ages 13-24) using both qualitative and quantitative methods, revealed that “control”—the ability to personalize and manage the media experience and content—emerged as the primary reason this group chooses the Internet over other forms of media. Survey findings also showed that teens use the Internet as a “hub”—or primary media—while other media are used as a starting point for the online experience. While other generations are more likely to be wed to a single type of media, the study revealed that today’s teens and young adults are not overwhelmed by the abundance of media choices like cable stations, networks, magazines and radio, but rather feel empowered by it and are able to multi-task—using more than one form of media at a time—more than any other generation.
On a typical day, a young person is faced with a universe full of media which includes 200+ cable television networks, 5,500 consumer magazine titles, 10,500 radio stations, 30 million+ websites, and 122,000 newly published books. To many adults, this is a daunting, fragmented media landscape. Not so among today’s youth generation. They were literally born to a world of media choice that places them firmly in control of their media environment.
“Marketers have been using the same media strategies since television became the primary medium for most market segments in the 1950s. It’s time to rethink,” said Wenda Harris Millard, chief sales officer, Yahoo!. “The findings of our joint study confirm that the media landscape is shifting. Our industry needs to evaluate and change our communications approach to successfully reach this key target market. This generation is a revolutionary consumer group, actively in control and entrenched in their media experience, and their patterns will influence the future of media spending.”
“It is so important for marketers to understand the sea change that is taking place in media consumption habits. Nowhere is this more pronounced than in the teen segments,” said Sarah Fay, president of Carat Interactive. “This study gives us insight that helps not only to determine the appropriate media mix for reaching teens, but more importantly the role of each medium, and how the dots connect within that mix. This new information will guide us into the future as consumer media habits continue to morph toward more diverse and fragmented mediums.”
Bronnen:
Internet is het belangrijkste medium voor de jeugd
Marketeers die zich op tieners richten, moeten internet gebruiken. Dit blijkt uit onderzoek van de Noord-Amerikaanse tak van mediabureau Carat, in samenwerking met webportal Yahoo. Jongeren tussen de 13 en 24 jaar blijken internet te verkiezen boven televisie, radio en boeken. Ze zitten per week 16,7 uur te internetten, 13,6 uur tv te kijken en 12 uur naar de radio te luisteren. Onder het internetgebruik wordt overigens niet het bijhouden van e-mailcorrespondentie gerekend. `De resultaten van ons gezamenlijk onderzoek bevestigt dat het medialandschap aan het veranderen is`, zegt Wenda Harrid, chef verkoop bij Yahoo. `Deze generatie is een revolutionaire consumentengroep, die actief de controle heeft over en overtuigd is van hun mediabeleving, en hun gedrag zal de mediabudgetten beinvloeden.` De 2.500 via online interviews en focusgroepen ondervraagde jongeren verkozen internet omdat ze hier de meeste controle hebben over hun media-ervaring.