Thursday, March 7, 2019
Noting Social Networking Trends
The query question that was parti every(prenominal)y attend toed by my mini-research is two-fold. I refer myself by asking first, what social networking sites (if any) were partd by family members and peers. Secondly, if usage of these sites was confirmed, I asked the purpose for the use of these various social tools. Since, these sites are so customary, I wanted to know if there was a difference in age, gender, or any other demographic information that would make usage convert in the exemplar population.I interviewed 22 people and out of those 22, 18 of them account apply some type of social networking sites. The four that did not use them claimed that they very rarely, if ever used the internet or that they had no requisite for these tools. Two of these respondents were over 50, but two were relatively young, white, blue-collar types. Of the 18 that did report using social networking sites, 5 of them admitted to having an account, but infrequently or never visiting the si tes or utilizing them in any way.There was no green demographic in these five, the only commonality was a response of organism too busy or staying connected with others through other means, such(prenominal) as texting or hanging out. This leaves 13 respondents that admitted to regular using and utilizing social networking sites. Out of these 13, the ages of users ranged from 14 to 47. Both males and females were represented almost equally. ethnically speaking, more whites than blacks were left at this stage in the sample, making whites be slightly over represented.Many sites were reported as creation used and many an(prenominal) reasons were given for using them. Of both younger men and women (aged 14-26 and 9 members in this subgroup) MySpace was cited as being the most used site with most of the respondents coverage that they used this site everyday to stay in contact with friends. Of this identical age group, more men than women, also, reported using both Imeem and Buzznet to harken to music and/or to find new artists with Imeem being more popular than Buzznet (with only 2 of 6 using Buzznet).The remaining 4 respondents were all Caucasian women from the ages of 33-47. Facebook was popular with all 4 for staying connected with old friends and/or networking. Myspace was unpopular with all and cited by one respondent as being made for teens. Going and LinkedIn were also popular with LinkedIn being popular with 3 and Going with 2. LinkedIn was said to be popular for business purposes and Going was considered a popular way to find events and parties in the surrounding areas.This research begins to answer the two-part question, but further research and a larger group to sample may answer the question fully. These demographics were pretty universal in the popularity and reason for using the sites and further study could help advertisers learn how to more specifically target the demographics in and outside these sites. Also, social scientists could look at this research more broadly to gauge trends in social behavior and communicating that could effect the way groups of people in different demographic categories fill with one another in jobs or in other arenas of unexclusive life.
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