In the demographics thread, Eine Alpensinfonie wrote:
I hate to admit it, but when I compared the demographics of R3 listeners to those of UK Twitter and Facebook users, the phrase "GROSS MISMATCH" sprang to mind.
For the life of me, I can't think of how to explain away the fact that the majority of R3 listeners are going to find Facebook and Twitter completely irrelevant. Does anyone want to give it a crack? I mean seriously--how does this even make sense? The reach is small, and the demographics are almost polar opposites. Less than 3% of those over 65 use Twitter and Facebook at all, and 75% are under 44! Given that, what are the odds R3 listeners tuning in are going to care? Slim to none...certainly not enough to bother. Even the old standby "It's not about the audience we have, it's about the audience we want to have" doesn't hold water...it's a mismatch, pure and simple.
The next time you people talk to Auntie and the Trust, you might want to ask them to explain why Twitter and Facebook are a good fit for R3 in light of the following:
Chart source: "UK Social Media Statistics"
But wait! It gets even worse when you read Nielsen statistics about how Twitter is actually used in the UK:
"Twitter users come in two colours according to recent reports: over-sharing or silent. Last week, audience research company Nielsen released figures suggesting an enormous polarity between active and inactive members in the UK. The graph shows that 79% of time spent on the site comes from just 7% of its members:"
Moving on, the Times Technology Blog reports on some research published at the end of January by RJMetrics. Surveying 50,000 users, the report found that most members of Twitter simply do not tweet. Here, around 80% of users have published fewer than ten updates since opening their account.
Source: "Lies, Damned Lies and Twitter Usage Statistics"
I realise this is more or less what you've been saying already, but seeing actual figures in print was quite an eye-opener. You were right, I was wrong.
Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie
For the life of me, I can't think of how to explain away the fact that the majority of R3 listeners are going to find Facebook and Twitter completely irrelevant. Does anyone want to give it a crack? I mean seriously--how does this even make sense? The reach is small, and the demographics are almost polar opposites. Less than 3% of those over 65 use Twitter and Facebook at all, and 75% are under 44! Given that, what are the odds R3 listeners tuning in are going to care? Slim to none...certainly not enough to bother. Even the old standby "It's not about the audience we have, it's about the audience we want to have" doesn't hold water...it's a mismatch, pure and simple.
The next time you people talk to Auntie and the Trust, you might want to ask them to explain why Twitter and Facebook are a good fit for R3 in light of the following:
Chart source: "UK Social Media Statistics"
But wait! It gets even worse when you read Nielsen statistics about how Twitter is actually used in the UK:
"Twitter users come in two colours according to recent reports: over-sharing or silent. Last week, audience research company Nielsen released figures suggesting an enormous polarity between active and inactive members in the UK. The graph shows that 79% of time spent on the site comes from just 7% of its members:"
Moving on, the Times Technology Blog reports on some research published at the end of January by RJMetrics. Surveying 50,000 users, the report found that most members of Twitter simply do not tweet. Here, around 80% of users have published fewer than ten updates since opening their account.
Source: "Lies, Damned Lies and Twitter Usage Statistics"
I realise this is more or less what you've been saying already, but seeing actual figures in print was quite an eye-opener. You were right, I was wrong.
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