Entries categorized as ‘Statistics’
According to BIGresearch’s Simultaneous Media Usage Survey of over 22,000 consumers, the audience for mobile marketing is growing but that the audience is still relatively small. Demographically, consumers who like mobile marketing tend to be young men.
| Key Characteristics of Mobile Marketing Users and Non-Users |
|
|
Mobile Marketing Users |
Mobile Marketing Non-Users |
| Men |
57.9% |
46.2% |
| Women |
42.1% |
53.8% |
| Average Age |
39.2 |
45.9 |
| Online search triggered by cell phone |
17.4% |
2.4% |
| Communicate about search via cell phone |
41.3% |
26.3% |
| Download music/video to cell phone |
33.3% |
14.6% |
| Regularly Use Facebook |
37.9% |
27.8% |
| Regularly Use MySpace |
23.2% |
9.8% |
| Regularly Use Twitter |
13.1% |
3.5% |
| Source: BIGresearch, November 2009 |
More data on mobile marketing users:
- They are more likely than non-users to regularly give advice to others about products or services they have purchased
- They are more likely to regularly seek advice than non-users
- Their top triggers for online searches are magazines, coupons and cable TV
- After conducting online search, they are most likely to communicate about it with others via face-to-face, email and cell phone
- Both mobile marketing users and non-users go to iTunes.com, YouTube.com and LimeWire.com – in that order- most often to access or download video/music content
- They are more likely to visit Facebook, Myspace and Twitter “regularly,” vs. non-users.
Additionally, the percentage of people who don’t like mobile marketing has increased across the board since June 2008.
- 66.8% of overall respondents don’t like text ads (vs. 63.5% in 2008)
- 60.2% don’t like voicemail ads (vs. 56.8% in 2008)
- 59.6% don’t like video ads (vs. 56.1% in 2008)
- 58% of people think marketers need permission prior to sending an ad (vs. 55.6% in 2008)
- 52.1% think mobile ads are an invasion of privacy (vs. 49.5% in 2008).
Categories: Communication · Research · Statistics
Tagged: mobile marketing, mobile web
New data on market share from BurrellesLuce in 2010 edition of “Top Media Outlets: Newspapers, Blogs, Consumer Magazines & Social Networks:
- Facebook has a 45.5 percent market share
- MySpace has a 20.3 percent market share
- YouTube is the only other social network with double-digit market share at 13.6 percent
- Three additional sites attained market share of at least 1.0 percent: Tagged (1.7), Yahoo! Answers (1.1) and Twitter (1.0).
This is the seventh year that BurrellesLuce has produced rankings of top media, which are based on research it conducts twice a year. The latest social network rankings reflect data reported by Hitwise as of Oct. 31, 2009; blog standings mirror Technorati’s Authority scores for Nov. 6, 2009; the newspaper figures are compiled by the Audit Bureau of Circulations (ABC) for the six-month period ending Sept. 30, 2009, and the magazine numbers are ABC’s for the six months ending June 30, 2009.
Categories: Research · Statistics
Tagged: BurrellesLuce, facebook, social networking, YouTube
Nielsen research shows that social media has not only changed the way consumers communicate and gather on the Web, but also impacted content discovery. The research included an online panel survey of 1,800 participants fielded in August 2009 .
Findings
A segment of the online population uses social media as a core navigation and information discovery tool — roughly 18 percent of users see it as core to finding new information.

Socializers trust what their friends have to say and social media acts as an information filtration tool. Socializers gravitate towards and believe what is shared with friends and family. If your friend creates or links to the content, then you are more likely to believe it and like it.

Categories: Research · Statistics
Tagged: Nielsen Company, social media, social networking