
The Mobile Difference – Research Study
I recently read an incredible article that for me really shed light on trending and patterns toward a complete mobile experience. Many of these trend we always share with our clients. However, this in-depth look at each facet of the mobile population really helps to form concrete patterns and models around the concept of mobility.
Here’s an introduction to the latest Pew Internet Research Study called “The Mobile Difference” published March 25, 2009.
Before you read, please take note that the dates of the two surveys used to formulate this report concluded in December 2007. Of course, we know that things change at such a fast clip these days that these results can be seen as a precursor to the change in habits that have been formed since this study. Again, the iPhone didn’t even hit the market, quick text phones with full keyboards were only found on a smartphone and 3G wasn’t full deployed allowing fast connectivity for mobile users. Enjoy the study.
In the early 1980s, Americans started spending more time on the telephone. From 1980 to 1987, the number of minutes spent on the phone increased by 24%, three times the rate of population growth. At first, the reasons first seemed mysterious. Yes, fax machines were entering the workplace and the personal computing revolution was getting off the ground, both of which might have spurred growth voice traffic. But these factors were thought to account for no more than 10% of the growth.
The cause? The telephone answering machine. Although just 28% of homes had answering machines for their telephones in 1987, these new devices meant once-missed calls were returned and now-completed calls encouraged more phone calling.
This episode shows how relatively small changes in society’s technology portfolio in one area can have significant impacts in a related one. The answering machine served as an accelerant in to Americans’ existing calling patterns.4 In a similar way, mobile internet access is drawing people into more frequent online use. The information nugget initially discovered on the handheld device might prompt a user to open the laptop at home to explore further. Conversely, the fascinating blog post discovered on the desktop at home might be pursued further on the mobile device on the train to work and then taken along new pathways once online at the office.
This finding that mobile internet access is drawing people further into the digital world is the cornerstone of the Pew Internet Project’s second typology of information and communication technology (ICT) users.5 Some five groups in this typology – making up 39% of the adult population – have seen the frequency of their online use grow as their reliance on mobile devices has increased. Across those groups, there is a lot of variation on what these changes mean to users. Some find this extra connectivity a Pew Internet & American Life Project The Mobile Difference | 18 platform for self expression. Others are not entirely positive about ICTs’ impacts on their lives. communication technology (ICT) users. Some five groups in this typology – making list of 10 actions on their cell phone and whether they had, on the prior day, done a up 39% of the adult population – have seen the frequency of their online use grow as their reliance on mobile devices has increased. Across those groups, there is a lot of 2006. In 2006, respondents were asked about the various capacities (e.g., to take a Pew Internet & American Life Project The Mobile Difference | 19 picture or record video) with some follow-up questions on whether they actually used variation on what these changes mean to users. Some find this extra connectivity a platform for self expression. Others are not entirely positive about ICTs’ impacts on their lives.
Then there is the other 61% of the adult population who do not feel the pull of mobility – or anything else – further into the digital world. Across the five groups that make up this part of the population, several have a lot of technology at hand and have seen their tech assets grow in recent years. Yet ICTs remain on the periphery in their lives, suggesting that some adult Americans reach a plateau in their technology use. Some groups are content with this distant relationship to technology. For others, even a little modern gadgetry is too much.
Read the complete study here: The Mobile Difference
June 18, 2009 in Blog | No Comments
One in five households have cut their landlines
FACT: 20% of Households are Mobile-Only.
A survey conducted by the NCHS found that on- fifth of U.S. households have cut out their land line phones and rely solely on their cell phones. In fact, the rate of households going wireless may be increasing as families cut costs during the economic downturn.
Preliminary results from the July-December 2008 National Health Interview Survey (NHIS) indicate that the number of American homes with only wireless telephones continues to grow. More than one of every five American homes (20.2%) had only wireless telephones (also known as cellular telephones, cell phones, or mobile phones) during the second half of 2008, an increase of 2.7 percentage points since the first half of 2008.
The number of households without a land line phone jumped to 20 percent from 17 percent in the second half of 2008. This is the largest jump in mobile-only health since the National Center for Health Statistics began this survey in 2003.
The NCHS collects statistics on land line and mobile phone use as part of its annual National Health Interview Survey. The survey showed that over 12 thousand US households became mobile-only from July to December last year.
Now there are more households in the US relying solely on mobile phones than land lines. Just 17 percent of households surveyed relied solely on a land line phone for calls.
Of the households with land line phones, many of them already receive the majority of their calls on their mobile phone. This portion of the homes with land lines represents almost 15 percent of the remaining households.
Over 60 percent of adults that share a flat with other roommates and a third of those aged 18-29 also rely exclusively on mobile phones to communicate.
Other groups relying solely on mobile phones are 40 percent of all renters and 25 percent of Hispanic households. On the other end of the scale are homeowners, of which only 9 percent have cut out their home phones.
Stephen Blumberg of the CDC, an author of the report, believes, “that with the recession, we’d see an increase in the prevalence of wireless only households, above what we might have expected had there been no recession.” After all, if a family has to choose between the two, they’re more likely to keep the mobile phone that they can carry with them.
BACKGROUND:
For many years, NHIS has included questions on residential telephone numbers, to permit recontacting of survey participants. Starting in 2003, additional questions were asked, to determine whether the family’s telephone number was a landline telephone. All survey respondents were also asked whether “you or anyone in your family has a working cellular telephone.”
A “family” can be an individual or a group of two or more related persons living together in the same housing unit (a “household”). Thus, a family can consist of only one person, and more than one family can live in a household (including, for example, a household where there are multiple single-person families, as when unrelated roommates are living together).
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