It seems like every week there is a new study about the demographics of Twitter users. The problem that I have with these studies is that usually something seems “off” with regard to the analysis.  In fact, the findings often seem misleading and designed to garner publicity instead of answering fundamental questions. This past week, Nielsen published some data from their Nielsen NetRatings panel regarding the growth rates of Twitter users by age group. In this case, to further support the sensationalized Morgan Stanley report about teens use of Twitter based on the habits of their 15 year old intern.  The problem is that most people take the headline at face value and never read the details. Furthermore, they then ”retweet” and blog about it without critical analysis until it becomes “fact.”  

Consequently, as a result of this Nielsen NetRatings study,  the twittersphere is abuzz with the headline that “TEENS DON’T TWEET!” trending to the top of the Twitter search.  It sounds so alarming, you’d think the sky was falling. 

In their article, Nielsen makes the following statement:

“Perhaps even more impressively, this growth has come despite a lack of widespread adoption by children, teens, and young adults. In June 2009, only 16 percent of Twitter.com website users were under the age of 25. Bear in mind persons under 25 make up nearly one quarter of the active US Internet universe, which means that Twitter.com effectively under-indexes on the youth market by 36 percent.”

It’s true, the growth of Twitter is impressive and the size of the youth market using Twitter is very small. However, I think the claim is misleading, and I’m not jumping on the ”OMG, teens don’t tweet!” bandwagon.  Here’s why:

The Nielsen chart is listed as the Twitter.com Website Growth by Age Group.  While the graph itself shows the growth visually, the only numbers listed are the percentages for June 2009, which indicate the absolute proportion of users by age range. 

twitter_by_age

While this is interesting information, the numbers don’t really tell us what the change in the proportion has been for each segment over time – or the actual growth rate for that group.  That’s an important piece of information — is the proportion of young people less than or more than what it was 6 months ago? Are young people keeping up? Are they accelerating their rate of adoption, despite their relatively small absolute numbers?

The answer is Yes. In fact, it looks like there has been an explosion in the 2 to 24 year old group’s use of Twitter in the past 6 months.  Based on a quick analysis of the graph,  the 2 to 24 year old segment grew from just under 6% of the users in January to 16% of users by June. 

I think that’s pretty huge. The youth segment substantially increased their relative size in the Twitter population. And, somehow, they managed to do this despite the fact that we’re realistically only talking about a 10 year range (13 to 24).  This is in contrast to the vast majority of people who fall into the 25+ category, which represents about a 50 year range! 

Since the number of users in January was substantially smaller than in June, it’s difficult to simply view the Nielsen graph and make an assessment of the percentages. Just a thought for Nielsen — I wouldn’t have had to do so much work if you had simply included the numbers upfront.  To make the calculation reasonably accurate, I put the graph into Photoshop and added a grid to it. I then estimated the audience to come up with the percentages for January. Doing this clearly showed that only 6% of the total were 2 to 24 years old in January, which was about 260k people. By June, the number of younger Twitter users was more than 10 times what it was 6 months ago, whereas the number of Twitter users over 25 was only 3 to 4 times what it was 6 months ago.  So, yes, the absolute numbers are larger for the overall population but the kids are catching up!

 Nielsen chart overlayed with percentages for January 2009

Using the grid overlay, I was able to get a good estimate of the numbers behind this graph… 

Analysis of the Nielsen Twitter Users Chart

Analysis of the Nielsen Twitter Users Chart

I’m attaching my spreadsheet here for anyone who would like to look at the calculations. 

Semantics. Semantics.

As mentioned, on the surface, the study shows that 2 to 24 year olds are under-indexed by 36% when it comes to tweeting. This group represents 25% of the Internet audience and only 16% of the Twitter audience.  I don’t have an issue with that. My issue is that rather than the misleading headline “Teens Don’t Tweet, Twitter’s Growth Not Fueled By Youth” it would be more correct to say:

“Teens Are Less Likely to Tweet. Twitter’s Growth Not Fueled By Youth”

or, even better:

“Teens Less Likely to Tweet, But Numbers Are Growing”

or

“Youth Market Finally Catching on to Twitter!”

In other words, take teens out of it, unless you are going to publish a story specifically about teens, who are generally 13 to 17.

Let’s further address the age range. The study aggregates children, teens and young adults. Why do that?  The behavior of these three groups is very different, for obvious reasons. To lump them all into the same category makes for an uninspired and confusing analysis. There are plenty of issues related to this:

Terms of Service:  The Twitter terms of service prevent anyone under the age of 13 from using the site. So, why are we talking about 2 to 24 year olds?  Seriously, are there any 5 year old tweeters? Most 5 year olds are just learning to read, so the idea that they would be on Twitter is ridiculous. They may be on the Internet, but they are doing other activites designed for kids.  Given the recent amount of porn spam, I don’t think I would want any kid under the age of 18 using it.

Public Environment: Twitter is a public place and I can’t see many parents allowing their teens on Twitter — a lot of people I know are still debating when to let their kids get a Facebook account, which is as private as you want to make it.

Again, Nielsen, why are you reporting the age range of 2 to 24? And, more importantly, did that 25% you mentioned actually include kids under 13? If so, you should remove them and recalculate your percentages.

Even still, I’m not sure 13-24 is really that useful of a group anyway. It would have been more interesting to break it out into 13 to 17 and 18 to 24 olds — pretty standard categories in the research world.  I’d like to know more about the differences between teens and young adults and their adoption rates of Twitter. 

Assuming that we’re really talking about teens and young adults, and not children, there are a host of other reasons which have already been brought up about why teens, in particular, don’t use Twitter as much as adults:

  • Teens aren’t in front of a computer all day
  • Many don’t have smart phones, which would make interacting with Twitter difficult and not particularly engaging.
  • They don’t want to use up their text message limits on Twitter
  • Their friends are elsewhere (Facebook and other social networks)
  • It’s public — and they don’t want their parents to see what they are up to
  • They are (generally) not selling anything (which is why a lot of people use Twitter)
  • They are (generally) not interested in sharing and discussing business articles (ya think?)
  • They are (generally) not interested in discussing world events (war, politics, etc.)
  • and so on.

So, as Mashable asks, what does this mean for the future of Twitter?

Well, as presented it doesn’t mean much, for the reasons listed above. I think we should be more focused on the trend and the trend is looking good for the youth market. The base is much smaller, so it’s not surprising that the numbers seem relatively small. However, time will tell.

In terms of young adults, as young people migrate into the workforce, if they are not adopting Twitter – for networking purposes or news/information, then this is something that could be a problem in the long run. However, by that time, all the adult early adopters may have moved on to something else as well.

In terms of teens, if Twitter wants to accelerate the growth of the youth market, then they should develop some features that would make it fun and safe for teens while relieving parental anxiety over public tweeting. Since the parents are likely to be the gatekeepers anyway of some of their teens Internet use, the parents need to feel comfortable with it. 

There is still plenty of growth possible for Twitter so I don’t think we need to worry that teens are under-indexing on Twitter use just yet. Despite all the buzz, we’re still not talking about that many users relative to Facebook, for example. And, until Twitter can provide a stable, scalable platform, do we really want to encourage rapid growth?  Nothing is more of a turn off to both new and existing users than super-slow page loads and fail whales. Just think about how unusable Twitter was this spring when Ashton Kutcher and Oprah got onboard.

Presidential elections are not the only domain for sensational headlines and sound bites, the business community is predisposed to latching onto them too. The problem is that they muddy up reality and most people never get past them. It’s like when the CEO of a company comes to only one focus group and it happens to be the anomaly. He/she will only remember what they saw in the one group and think that this represents the behavior of all customers. Generally speaking, it would be better for everyone if we all bothered to read the full report. 

Let me know your thoughts and take a look at my spreadsheet to make sure I’m not missing something. :-)

13 Responses to “Teens Don’t Tweet? Not true!”

  1. Warren Says:

    Pam,

    Great analysis and insights. You’ve certainly proven the old adage about how statistics can be twisted in any way to prove one’s point. Shame on Nielsen for not analyzing effectively. Based on your analysis, would it be safe to extrapolate that in about 6 months, the teens on Twitter group will be larger than the 55+? Maybe we’d then see the headline, Seniors don’t tweet!

  2. Jed Cohen Says:

    This is an great post Pamela. As a 21 year old Twitter user, I must admit that I was at first frustrated by the “teens don’t tweet” headline. After all, as you pointed out, the demographic does include the 17-24 range. And I’m curious as to why that is; it’s not as if we haven’t been exposed to Facebook, as a good portion of my age group probably joined while it was only open to college students. I wonder if it is perhaps the growth of Twitter in the direction of a marketing tool that has limited its adoption by my peers.

    Your analysis of Nielsen’s graph leads me to ask – can we use this to predict future growth of the demographics? I’m not sure the data is significant enough to predict long term growth (it does look to be a roughly exponential pattern but it is only six months of data), but it would be interesting if it can provide some short term insights – perhaps the next few months’ growth.

  3. Pamela Rosenthal Says:

    Hi Warren,

    Thanks so much. Really appreciate you stopping by! That’s an awesome point you raise. It’s quite possible that the teens will overtake the 55+ segment if they keep going at the current pace. I’m putting it on my calendar to check into it at the end of the year. :-) Cheers!

  4. Pamela Rosenthal Says:

    Hi Jed,
    Thanks for your thoughtful comments. I think the issue of the perception of Twitter as marketing tool is a definite issue. If I was still 21 I probably wouldn’t be on a “business site” unless I had already graduated and needed a job. I do see a lot of recent grads on Twitter, which would support the point.

    In terms of extrapolating the trend, yes, I think that’s entirely possible to do and would likely be directionally valid in the short term.

    Thanks again for the thoughts!

  5. Nicolas Ward Says:

    Great analysis Pam. I think my perception of any of these trends is skewed by the fact that I’m in the geek subculture of my current age range; I very probably would have been a tweeting teen had Twitter been available at the time (as it was, I regularly lurked in topical AIM chatrooms, even using my still-current handle. I wonder what those chat logs would say about me today? :-)


  6. Pamela,

    Thanks for doing this analysis and bringing some perspective to the conversation!

  7. Sean Fitzroy Says:

    I was really hoping to leave an odd numbered comment so that I could get an eyeball-grabbing shaded CSS box, but here goes anyway:

    Good analysis. I would go further calling BS on any of this teen “research”. We’re just over two years into micro-blogging. I doubt that many teens were running their own blogs on Moveable Type or Blogger two years in either.

    To expand on some of your (bullet) points:

    - Teens tend to prefer application / community verticals — that is technology with and end to end experience. Twitter (like blogs and RSS) are components of a larger web application. Using Twitter effectively currently requires finding and using discovery applications, URL shorteners, twit-photo-pic-upload services, and a lot of search and discovery on the open web.

    - Teens have tended to flock to sites with less openness in favor of better integration (LiveJournal communities instead of open blogs, MySpace, and Facebook to some extent, instead of Twitter).

    - Like you mentioned teens aren’t always by a computer (even if they have a “lappy”). They’re in school and it’s just easier to use a phone. This, I think, is huge. They lose most of the benefit of the texting / computer hybrid application.

    - Teens are far more comfortable texting than adults. They do a lot more group texting than adults did before Twitter, so again Twitter becomes less differentiated as a group short messaging tool.

    - Teens just aren’t concerned with “Making Money From Home” or retweeting every headline from TechCrunch or dumping their Social Media Marketing blog’s RSS feed into a twitter stream or asking rhetorical questions about how “you’re using social media to build your brand today?”. They have a tight and (if I remember correctly) fairly intense, often drama-soaked social circle and hierarchy. They’re not yet concerned with contributing to the entire world or even to the entire World Wide Web. They’re too busy finding themselves and figuring out where they stand in their own social groups.

    They’re interested in tools which explicitly help them work and define themselves within that group. They don’t so much care about real-time short messaging “platforms” which could possibly help them achieve their goals with some add-on services, and the right client software, and some simple API calls or whatever.

    Teens use applications, not platforms. Twitter is a platform with a bunch of little applications, some of which kind of work, many of which don’t yet work, and most of which are about managing Twitter itself. Today’s teens are “Digital Natives” (sorry, physical proximity to The Berkman Center —it rubs off) they simply don’t have the anxiety around figuring out this Internet thing that many “grown ups” do. They’re not obsessed with figuring out how not to miss whatever 3.0 boat is coming next, after having missed boats 1.0 and 2.0

    Twitter is a naked technology platform right now and teens aren’t afraid, consciously or unconsciously, to tell the Emperor that he needs some clothes before they’ll hang out with him.

    -Sean

    http://www.seanfitzroy.com
    http://ephemer.us
    @fitzroy

  8. Pamela Rosenthal Says:

    Hey Sean! Thanks for adding your insightful perspective to the mix. You raise excellent points about teens, especially with regard to how they are not analyzing or obsessing over technology the way adults do — they are using what works for them and probably more preoccupied about their social life than about what technology they use. After all, if they don’t have a cool phone they can always blame it on their parents. :-)


  9. Great job, Pamela, love how you’ve cut through the hype here and intricately extracted some truth out of these statistics (feel like you’ve read “How to Lie with Statistics)! Totally agree 2-24 is ridiculous, 13-17 and 18-24 makes much more sense, especially given the online behavioral changes that come with college. Without that break-down, these numbers tell us very little if anything.


  10. Oustanding analysis, Pamela. You bring up some great points where the numbers are concerned, especially regarding the age limit to use Twitter, the fact that teens likely don’t want to waste texts on their plan via Twitter, the fact that parents may be keeping them from trying Twitter, privacy and that because of all the factors you mentioned — Twitter may not be where the “cool kids” are hanging out…yet.

    Working on a presentation around milenials and their use of technology/social media and one of the most interesting points I’ve come across in the research is that while adults often expect teenagers to be able to teach them about any online topic, millenials would actually benefit from a teacher/class that could highlight the benefits of Twitter in the business world.

    Twitter doesn’t seem to be on many college students’ radar screens, but they want to find a job, network and do their job better once they get it…all of which could be facilitated by engaging on Twitter.

    The point I’m trying to make is it actually may not be a bad thing that more “adults” 25 and up are using Twitter so they can help the younger generation see the value in Twitter and the impact it can have on their personal brand once they enter the working world.

    Agree? See any factors that might lead to earlier adoption for teens other than just more folks trying Twitter out?

  11. Shitij Nigam Says:

    I couldn’t agree more. Heck, I’m 18 years old and I’ve been tweeting like crazy for the past month. The “Teens don’t Tweet” headline really was quite off-putting I must say. The Terms of Service specification for below 13 year olds does put it in a better perspective, although my personal opinion is that I’m not completely sure if kids coming under that category (including me as well) actually read the Terms and Services much before clicking on the Register button. But like Eric says, 2-24 is simply too broad to count in any case.

    Brilliant work. Loved it.

    Cheers!
    Shitij

  12. David Welch Says:

    Agree! I called BS when I saw the original report a couple of days ago. Left comments every where I could, etc. The Nielsen Graph, not only dated themselves, but is irresponsible for creating 25 yr age spans.

    My original experience with twitter isn’t “business, or push messaging” it was a group of friends with protected updates, an alternative to overgrowth of acquaintances on facebook. I’m predicting that is how teens will adopt twitter. Esp until facebook figures out that the user needs to be able to assign status updates to a particular friends group – i.e. twitter and protected tweets.

    I think the other variable to look at is web vs. mobile. I think teens who have iPhones are adopting twitter faster than those using sidekicks or purely web.

    Teens who are ‘mavins’, mini-celebs at their schools, networkers will adopt twitter. I think it’s a ‘clique’ thing. With protected updates it’s the only app that allows people to really be ‘in’ or ‘out’.

  13. Steve Dodd Says:

    Pamela, this is a terrific analysis and the point is well taken regarding statistics and headline hype! More depth like this is needed if we are ever going to truly understand the impact of Twitter and other Social Networks. There is far more value inside the Twitter user community than anyone has truly identified through the supposed “Statistics”. Unfortunately, all they do focus the online community away from the really important questions and hidden value these networks truly provide us all.
    Thanks and I can only wish I’d seen this sooner!


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