Facebook may have a budding problem on
its hands with its teenagers, suggests a report released Tuesday by PewResearch Center.
Teens expressed waning enthusiasm for
Facebook in focus groups, according to Pew, saying they disliked the growing
number of adults on the site, were annoyed by "inane" status updates,
and viewed the drama commonly played out on Facebook as draining. Finally,
managing their reputation on Facebook was stressful they said.
Teens seemed to be far more favorably
disposed toward Twitter than in the past, Pew found. Twenty-four percent of
online teens said they used Twitter, up from 16 percent in 2011.
Despite those observations, Pew's
findings do not suggest an immediate and massive exodus of teenagers from
Facebook. They are still very present on the site, with 94 percent of online
teens maintaining an active page, the report acknowledges. They also maintain a
larger footprint on it, compared to Twitter: A typical teen Facebook user has
300 friends, while the typical teen Twitter user has 79 followers.
Nevertheless, the direction of the
trend does not bode well for Facebook, according to Robert Epstein, senior
research psychologist at the American Institute for BehavioralResearch and Technology and author of the book Teen 2.0.
"That 94 percent figure doesn't
mean much," he told TechNewsWorld. "It's only the trend that counts,
and it's clearly moving away from Facebook."
Facebook will continue to lose appeal
with teens, predicted Epstein, for two reasons: 1) Teen culture views parents
and adults as the enemy, and as it happens, parents and adults have joined
Facebook in droves; and 2) Teen culture wants everything to be new, and
Facebook is rapidly becoming old.
"The same thing happened to
Myspace," he said. "It's also why Yahoo, out of desperation, just
bought Tumblr."
Brands that use Facebook to reach teens
should not panic however, Teresa Caro, SVP for social and content marketing at Engauge,
told TechNewsWorld.
"Just because teens may be moving
away from Facebook, that doesn't mean everyone is moving away from
Facebook," she said. "And it doesn't mean teens are moving away from
Facebook right away."
Facebook, while waning, is still the
most important social channel for teens, Caro noted, pointing to recent
research from Piper Jaffray. "Approximately 53 percent
of females and 52 percent of males indicated that social media impacts their
purchases, with Facebook being the most important, followed closely by Twitter
and Instagram."
However, that research also captured a
declining enthusiasm for Facebook, she observed, with 33 percent citing it as
the most important social channel, down from 42 percent six months ago.
Twitter's Gain
Marketers aren't waiting around to
learn what Facebook's ultimate fate will be -- they have already glommed onto
Twitter, in light of its growing popularity.
Connecticut College, for
example, has noticed a growth in Twitter use among prospective students, who
are typically 16-18 years old -- and it sees that as a great opportunity to
engage them, Josh Jensen, director of marketing communications, told
TechNewsWorld.
"Students may be using Facebook
just as much, but because it is a private medium, we don't know that," he
pointed out. "Twitter is public, making the growth in its use by teens
more evident to us -- and perhaps to other organizations and companies hoping
to engage this demographic."
As a result, the college has worked
Twitter into its admissions marketing strategy. "In the last year, we have created
a new Twitter feed, @conncollegelive, to capture the activity of campus,"
said Jensen.
"We have launched a series of
Google+ Hangouts promoted on Twitter and which allow prospective students to
submit questions on Twitter -- and all of our admission staff have created
Twitter handles and are tweeting," he added.
Bottom line -- Facebook isn't going
anywhere in the near or even medium term, but Twitter is on a tear.
"Yes, teens are cooling toward
Facebook, but when you think about it, tens of millions -- perhaps hundreds of
millions -- of teens use Facebook" Larry Weintraub, CEO of Fanscape,
told TechNewsWorld.
"There are still a lot of teens
who are using Facebook," he emphasized, "and it's up to Facebook to
continue to attract them -- as they're trying to do with the purchase of
Instagram."
08:28
Speed4career

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