Who is doing what with technology?
What if we could peer into every household in the United States and divine how - and why - 221 million American adults use all sorts of technologies, from cell phones to the Internet? Well, that's what Forrester Research did, in the statistical sense, with a new and wide-ranging survey, "The State of Consumers and Technology: Benchmark 2008."Forrester, a tech research firm in Massachusetts, polled a random sample of 54,522 American adults, age 18 and older, who head their own household. Respondents filled out 12-page, written surveys that asked 104 questions on all things digital.
With the help of analyst and lead author Charles Golvin, here are key findings about how American consumers relate to technology, as analyzed by the four age groups tapped in the survey: Generation Y, Generation X, Boomers and Seniors.
How groups are making good use of technology
Gen Y Gen X Boomers Seniors All households
1 mobile phone household 28% 24% 24% 36% 27%
Own a laptop 54% 47% 43% 22% 42%
Average spent
online in the past three months $463 $643 $757-775* $595 $653
Source: Forrester Research
* Reflects two subgroups in the Boomer category
"There are only three things that a majority of online users do regardless of age: e-mail, search and read news."
- Charles Golvin, analyst and study author.
Mobile saturation?
Says Golvin, "Almost everybody has a mobile phone these days ... there's not a lot of people who do not have a cell phone that you can sell to."
Make mine untethered
In the two-plus decades since the PC took the place of the typewriter, this digital dynamo has moved from desktop tool to laptop pal. Now, Golvin says, multi-computer households are becoming common because "otherwise it would be something the kids might fight over."
Fingers do the shopping
Online shopping is one activity that cuts across all age groups, but there are nuances: In general, the younger the person, the more likely they are to shop online. But because cash skews toward age, smaller numbers of older buyers have more dollar impact.
Gen Y
Ages 18-28
38 million
adults
10 million
households
Tagline: The Web rules, mass media drools.
Report: "GenY spends more time online (for leisure or work) than watching TV."
Golvin: "Gen Yers are more or less 'digital natives' ... they are heavy users of new media. It is their default."
Gen X
Ages 29-42
63 million
adults
34 million
households
Tagline: Comfortable online and with money to spend.
Report: "69 percent of online Gen Xers shopped online and 65 percent banked online, higher percentages than any other generation."
Golvin: "They have greater economic power (than Gen Yers) and are quick to adopt technologies ... there is a shift to family needs and away from individual needs."
Boomers
Ages 43-63
81 million
adults
48 million
households
Tagline: These older dogs reluctantly learn new tricks.
Report: "As a group, Boomers ... do not go online for new activities."
Golvin: "For this group, technology is primarily about convenience ... like online banking, they'll use it once they get proof it is easier and safe."
Seniors
Ages 64 +
39 million
adults
23 million
households
Tagline: Online, but barely and not often
Report: "Seniors . . . stick steadfastly to their offline behaviors . . . this generation spends the least amount of time online and still watches more TV and reads more newspapers than the others."
Golvin: "One might say an older dog is even more difficult to teach tricks to."