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Tuesday, May 08, 2007

Study shows huge split in tech market

Surprised? Really? Talked to your Mother lately?

A new survey about how consumers use technology has shattered industry assumptions and reveals where companies might be able to expand their audiences. The Pew Internet and American Life Project found that adult Americans are broadly divided into three groups: 31 per cent are elite technology users, 20 per cent are moderate users and the remainder have little or no usage of the internet or mobile phones. But Americans are divided within each group, according to a Pew analysis of 2006 data released Sunday. The high-tech elites, for instance, are almost evenly split into:

• "Omnivores," who fully embrace technology and express themselves creatively through blogs and personal web pages.

• "Connectors," who see the internet and mobile phones as communications tools.

• "Productivity enhancers," who consider technology as largely ways to better keep up with their jobs and daily lives.

• "Lackluster veterans," those who use technology frequently but aren't thrilled by it.

John Horrigan, Pew's associate director, said he started the survey believing that the more gadgets people have, the more they are likely to embrace technology and use so-called web 2.0 applications for generating and sharing content with the world.

"Once we got done, we were surprised to find the tensions within groups of users with information technology," Mr Horrigan said.

Many longtime internet users, the lackluster veterans, remain stuck in the decade-old technologies they started with, Horrigan said. That a quarter of high-tech elites fall into this category, he said, shows untapped potential for companies that can design next-generation applications to pique this group's interest. The moderate users were also evenly divided into "mobile centrics," those who primarily use the mobile phone for voice, text messaging and even games, and "connected but hassled," those who have used technology but find it burdensome.

Mobile companies, he said, can target the mobile centrics with premium services, especially once faster wireless networks become available.

The Pew study found 15 per cent of all Americans have neither a mobile phone nor an internet connection. Another 15 per cent use some technology and are satisfied with what it currently does for them, while 11 per cent use it intermittently and find connectivity annoying. Eight per cent - mostly women in the early 50s - occasionally use technology and might use more given more experience. They tend to still be on dial-up access and represent potential high-speed customers "with the right constellation of services offered," Mr Horrigan said.

The telephone study of 4,001 US adults, including 2,822 internet users, was conducted February 15 to April 6, 2006, and has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus 2 percentage points

http://australianit.news.com.au/articles/0,7204,21684832%5E15306,00.html

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