Some surprisingly new data about blog readershipMarch 25, 2005
A recent survey conducted by CNN, Gallup and USA Today reveals some surprising and new data about blog readership in the US. Fewer adults are aware of blogs, just 7 percent said they are very familiar with them, compared to 56 percent who said they are not at all familiar with blogs. Similarly, fewer read blogs regularly. What's notable is that, in all age groups, most users polled said they never read blogs, although readership is quite higher among younger people. As the survey's authors point out, news consumption is usually higher among older people than among younger people, suggesting that older people might be a receptive blog audience. And indeed, when the numbers are broken down by Internet usage, a different picture emerges. Just 33% of those age 65 and over use the Net, but of that online population, 28% read blogs. That figure is more in line with younger groups. For example, 91% of adults 18 to 29 years-old use the Net, and of those, 44% read blogs. A major force behind the expansion of blogging in the past few years has been politics, and many of the most popular blogs are political in nature. But a Gallup poll conducted in December 2004 found that few Americans get their daily dose of news from blogs. Rather, 51% reported getting their daily news updates from local TV news, 44% said they got it from local newspapers, and 39% got it from cable news stations. In fact, just 3% got news from blogs every day, less than radio talk shows and broadcast network news. But there is one group that flocks to blogs for daily updates — bloggers. As reported in Blog Readers Say Blogging Is Big, most bloggers read multiple blogs every day. And about three-fourths of bloggers read blogs because they feel the sites expose them to news they can't find elsewhere, and provide them with a better perspective. Of course, blogs are for more than news — they are used for keeping track of personal lives, businesses, goings-on in a city, and more. Blogging is still a relatively new phenomenon, and as familiarity with it expands, blogs may become more widely used. Source: eMarketer We strongly suggest you bookmark our web site by
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