Thursday, April 9, 2009

thoughts on early adoption



















There was an article on comscore recently showing the explosion of twitter traffic and it provides an interesting jumping off point for something I've been thinking about "youth marketing" and the idea of "early adopters".

First of the sharp rise in traffic in the last few months is relatively unsurprising given the publicity twitter has had lately. The senators sending tweets during Obama's speech recently really rocketed it into the spotlight.

What was really interesting was the demographics of twitter users:

"18-24 year olds, the traditional social media early adopters, are actually 12 percent less likely than average to visit Twitter (Index of 88). It is the 25-54 year old crowd that is actually driving this trend. More specifically, 45-54 year olds are 36 percent more likely than average to visit Twitter, making them the highest indexing age group, followed by 25-34 year olds, who are 30 percent more likely."

In the comscore post they link to this Reuters article that basically says that "new" technology isn't new any more, the technologically inclined "early adopters" are getting older, and that twitter is a simple technology that an older users, who in ever increasing numbers are getting plugged in to an increasingly more user friendly internet, can get their heads around.

While this is undoubtedly true, I think there is another factor at play. Twitter isn't terribly useful to most 12-24 year olds. The appeal of twitter is that you can reach out to, and draw from, a wider audience, which is why twitter is good for professionals and those looking for opportunities to build their careers and public profiles through self promotion and networking.

The demographic data could be explained by the fact that (despite what people like Future Lab may say) most people in their teens and early 20's aren't terribly concerned with building a career and networking yet, and to engage with the network they actually care about, cell phones and facebook work just fine.

The idea that teens would always be at the forefront of internet technology is, at this point, a rather dated one. It contains the assumption that new technology and new applications are one sort of thing. Different people have different needs and different goals and online, mobile and social technologies allow them to meet those goals in different ways.

This leads me to three thoughts that may warrant further exploration in other blog posts a) about a possible misconception about youth culture, b) about the inadequacy of the term "early adopter", and c) about the offline impact of online technology being more interesting and useful to look at than the latest widget or killer app.


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Friday, November 23, 2007

Last One Standing: Revisiting 80s Action Movies

I recently saw an ad for the new Discovery Channel show Last One Standing and it immediately reminded me of Running Man:



this thought has prompted me revisit my favorite genre of movies, best exemplified by the movies of Paul Verhoeven,: Action movies with social subtexts.

I think its worth putting this out here since it is a subject that I am fond of. There is a genre of action movies that came about during the 80s (at least the ones I'm aware of, I would love to find out about earlier ones): Big summer blockbuster action flicks that contain thinly veiled, left leaning, social critique. Great examples of these are:

  • They Live - Rowdy Roddy Piper uncovers a conspiracy to keep the working people down perpetrated by free market zombie aliens.

  • Escape from New York - Manhattan is cut off and turned into a lawless prison island, where criminals and enemies of state are marooned and left to fend for themselves.

  • RoboCop - One of my all time favorites. Omni Consumer Products (OCP) privatizes the Detroit police force in an effort to have the city destroy itself so they can build a corporate-owned city on its ashes. What they didn't count on was that the fundamental humanity of their mechanized lawman, RoboCop, would ultimately win out.

  • Running Man - In a future owned by the media companies, the judicial process is replaced by the highest rated gameshow in the country, and a wrongly accused man must (literally) fight the corrupt system to regain his freedom

While socially minded films like An Inconvenient Truth, Outfoxed, King Corn, and Sicko are exploring important issues and provoking debate, many times they are just preaching to the choir. People watching these films have usually made their mind up about which side of these issues they stand on, they're either open to the film's argument looking for new ammunition to back their views, or they disagree with the views espoused in the movie and are looking for something to rail against.

the great thing about these 80s action flicks is that they contain biting social satire, but couched in a format that is going to sell tshirts, action figures, and hopefully reach the hearts and minds of the people who may be least aware that there even is an issue.


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