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stoweboyd:


Lauren Indvik via Mashable
Thirteen percent of online Americans use Twitter, up a full 5% from November 2010, according to a Pew Research Center study released Wednesday.
Much of that growth came from younger adults, Pew found. Nearly one in five U.S. Internet users ages 25 to 34 use Twitter, up from 9% in November. Fourteen percent of users between 35 and 44 also now use the service, up from 8% a half-year previous.
But Twitter isn’t exclusively the domain of young adults; 8% of participants between 50 to 64 and 6% over the age of 65 consider themselves Twitter users, respectively.

Perhaps most intriguing is the demographic gap: 25% of African-Americans and 19% of Hispanics use the service, compared with 9% of Non-Hispanic Whites. Perhaps linked to the use of entertainment and cultural leaders?

gbattle sez:
Stowe, that’s a correlated explanation, but not a causal one.  Let’s go deeper.
The real explanation is as historical as the results are pervasive.  African Americans and Hispanics have always over-indexed in terms of Twitter usage, or any usage primarily driven by mobile devices (see PEW’s research study regarding SMS usage).  It’s not simply over-indexing by percentage of DAUs/MAUs for the demographic, but there’s been reports that African Americans account for 25% of all U.S. Tweets in terms of volume while being only 13% of the population.  This last fact can be seen anecdotally when witnessing the pervasive number of urban themed hashtag memes.
As I’ve said previously, Twitter is the black 4chan.
Why?  Entertainers and cultural leaders are the effect, but not the cause.  We have to go back to the 80s & 90s, back to the earliest phases of the consumer facing web and the so-called “digital divide” between white and African American/Hispanic communities in terms of computer/internet adoption.  The problem with the digital divide argument is that it wasn’t inclusive of all digital usage and only measured computer usage.  Urban communities have smaller homes, with apartments that might accommodate but one computer.  If present, that computer, typically, would be in a public area of the home - a family room, a living room - thus all usage would be “public.”  However, at the time, most of the internet’s usage growth occurred in private, where people tried on identities, utilized pseudonyms, connected with strangers, consumed the unthinkable, and engaged in fantasies in a world that began and ended at the dial tone.***
Beepers, Motorola 2-Ways, Sidekicks, Blackberrys and now smartphones bridged this privacy gap, allowing urbanites to enjoy in device driven fantasy.  It’s from this you get beeper codes, technology as fashion accessory, and friend/follower accumulation as proxy for social proof.  If it worked for suburban doctors, it also worked for the urban street pharmacists and those who postured as either one.  Overlay the ostentatious, aspirational, entrepreneurial and self-promotional culture of hip-hop and you create a gigantic viral loop from the bedroom to the streets to the clubs to the small and big screens propelling mobile technology to iconic status in black America.  Clearly, when Twitter hit in 2006/2007, you have an entire community predisposed and trained on short form communication for nearly twenty years.  Though there was a lag, the real African American usage on Twitter took off in 2008/2009 with the native Blackberry applications that were always ad-supported as hip-hop culture is synonymous with embedded brand messaging.
So, the dirty secret of the mobile phone and app industry is that African Americans (and Hispanics, females, and southerners demographically according to PEW) are a leading indicator for mainstreaming mobile social features.  There’s a reason why carriers created AMP’d and Boost Mobile instead of Skinny Jeans or Fixie+Facial Hair Mobile - historical content consumption/generation patterns, embedded knowledge, and fertile established viral graphs.
=====
*** After SixDegrees introduced us to the concept of a social network in 1997, the next three social networks of size were all minority focused ones created by Community Connect in 1999 - Asian Avenue, Black Planet and Mi Gente - all predating Friendster by 3 years.  It should come as no surprise that this early adoption translated to over-indexing on future social network services also.
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stoweboyd:

Lauren Indvik via Mashable

Thirteen percent of online Americans use Twitter, up a full 5% from November 2010, according to a Pew Research Center study released Wednesday.

Much of that growth came from younger adults, Pew found. Nearly one in five U.S. Internet users ages 25 to 34 use Twitter, up from 9% in November. Fourteen percent of users between 35 and 44 also now use the service, up from 8% a half-year previous.

But Twitter isn’t exclusively the domain of young adults; 8% of participants between 50 to 64 and 6% over the age of 65 consider themselves Twitter users, respectively.

Perhaps most intriguing is the demographic gap: 25% of African-Americans and 19% of Hispanics use the service, compared with 9% of Non-Hispanic Whites. Perhaps linked to the use of entertainment and cultural leaders?

gbattle sez:

Stowe, that’s a correlated explanation, but not a causal one.  Let’s go deeper.

The real explanation is as historical as the results are pervasive.  African Americans and Hispanics have always over-indexed in terms of Twitter usage, or any usage primarily driven by mobile devices (see PEW’s research study regarding SMS usage).  It’s not simply over-indexing by percentage of DAUs/MAUs for the demographic, but there’s been reports that African Americans account for 25% of all U.S. Tweets in terms of volume while being only 13% of the population.  This last fact can be seen anecdotally when witnessing the pervasive number of urban themed hashtag memes.

As I’ve said previously, Twitter is the black 4chan.

Why?  Entertainers and cultural leaders are the effect, but not the cause.  We have to go back to the 80s & 90s, back to the earliest phases of the consumer facing web and the so-called “digital divide” between white and African American/Hispanic communities in terms of computer/internet adoption.  The problem with the digital divide argument is that it wasn’t inclusive of all digital usage and only measured computer usage.  Urban communities have smaller homes, with apartments that might accommodate but one computer.  If present, that computer, typically, would be in a public area of the home - a family room, a living room - thus all usage would be “public.”  However, at the time, most of the internet’s usage growth occurred in private, where people tried on identities, utilized pseudonyms, connected with strangers, consumed the unthinkable, and engaged in fantasies in a world that began and ended at the dial tone.***

Beepers, Motorola 2-Ways, Sidekicks, Blackberrys and now smartphones bridged this privacy gap, allowing urbanites to enjoy in device driven fantasy.  It’s from this you get beeper codes, technology as fashion accessory, and friend/follower accumulation as proxy for social proof.  If it worked for suburban doctors, it also worked for the urban street pharmacists and those who postured as either one.  Overlay the ostentatious, aspirational, entrepreneurial and self-promotional culture of hip-hop and you create a gigantic viral loop from the bedroom to the streets to the clubs to the small and big screens propelling mobile technology to iconic status in black America.  Clearly, when Twitter hit in 2006/2007, you have an entire community predisposed and trained on short form communication for nearly twenty years.  Though there was a lag, the real African American usage on Twitter took off in 2008/2009 with the native Blackberry applications that were always ad-supported as hip-hop culture is synonymous with embedded brand messaging.

So, the dirty secret of the mobile phone and app industry is that African Americans (and Hispanics, females, and southerners demographically according to PEW) are a leading indicator for mainstreaming mobile social features.  There’s a reason why carriers created AMP’d and Boost Mobile instead of Skinny Jeans or Fixie+Facial Hair Mobile - historical content consumption/generation patterns, embedded knowledge, and fertile established viral graphs.

=====

*** After SixDegrees introduced us to the concept of a social network in 1997, the next three social networks of size were all minority focused ones created by Community Connect in 1999 - Asian Avenue, Black Planet and Mi Gente - all predating Friendster by 3 years.  It should come as no surprise that this early adoption translated to over-indexing on future social network services also.

(via stoweboyd)

    • #african americans
    • #gbattle
    • #hispanic
    • #mobile
    • #thoughts
    • #twitter
    • #social
  • 11 months ago > stoweboyd
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23 Notes/ Hide

  1. misterjt reblogged this from santagati and added:
    Lauren Indvik via Mashable Thirteen percent of online Americans use Twitter, up a full 5% from November 2010, according...
  2. nedramcbeadra likes this
  3. novamatic likes this
  4. santagati reblogged this from gbattle and added:
    Everything that gbattle sez.
  5. santagati likes this
  6. secondverse reblogged this from gbattle and added:
    “As I’ve said previously, Twitter is the black 4chan.”
  7. reneahenry reblogged this from gbattle
  8. shoeshinebrewingco reblogged this from caterpillarcowboy
  9. ojocincocinco likes this
  10. holzhuter reblogged this from caterpillarcowboy
  11. pukomuko likes this
  12. whitneymcn likes this
  13. gbattle likes this
  14. caterpillarcowboy reblogged this from gbattle
  15. the-unidentifiedblog reblogged this from gbattle and added:
    Boss article. Reade below. Thanks.
  16. gbattle reblogged this from stoweboyd and added:
    gbattle sez: Stowe, that’s a correlated explanation, but not a causal one. Let’s go deeper. The real explanation is as...
  17. socialnetworkingnews reblogged this from justbeingseriouslysocial
  18. gbattle said: i’ll answer this fully with a reblog soon …
  19. culturelabagency reblogged this from stoweboyd
  20. fredericguarino said: the other factor is mobile - African-Americans and Latinos have ‘overindexed’ mobile data use in the US since its infancy in 2003-2004.
  21. justbeingseriouslysocial reblogged this from stoweboyd
  22. stoweboyd posted this

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