Twitter on the move: profiling the mobile audience
Twitter CEO Dick Costolo revealed this month that two in five tweets are now made via mobile. The latest TGI MobiLens data shows that 4.6m British people visit Twitter on a monthly basis, and 460,000 access the site through a mobile device. Although it may be a stretch to suggest that, in Britain, 10% of Twitter visitors account for 40% of tweets, we can probably assume that the mobile audience is more vocal than its non-mobile counterpart.
Who are they?
The general adult Twitter audience in Britain comprises more men
than women, according to TGI, with a 56:44 gender split. This
imbalance largely disappears amongst the mobile audience, and
although the two groups share a median age of 30, the mobile
audience includes more 25-34s (37% of the total) and fewer 15-24s
(30% of the total).
As a result, the mobile Twitter audience includes a higher
proportion of full-time workers (45% vs 41%) and a lower proportion
of full-time students (10% vs 13%). The mobile audience is also
more metropolitan - 27% live in Greater London, compared to only
18% of general visitors to the site.
Attitudes
Overall, Twitter visitors are 68% more likely to agree that
celebrities influence their purchase decisions and 58% more likely
to 'buy new products before most of their friends'. Although
members of the mobile audience are even more likely (+66%) to think
of themselves as early adopters, they differ to the extent of being
no more likely than the average internet user to agree that
celebrities influence their purchase decision-making.
Mobile Twitterers (not all of them tweet) also tend to be more
ambitious and driven. Individuals are 94% more likely than the
average internet user to agree they are willing to sacrifice time
with their family in order to get ahead, and 76% more likely to
agree they like to have control over people and resources.
Forty-five per cent 'like' taking risks, compared to 34% of the
wider Twitter audience and only 25% of adults online.
Receptivity
Since the mobile Twitter audience appears less susceptible to
celebrity endorsement, we might assume they are also less receptive
to advertising. However, TGI MobiLens data suggests the opposite.
Approaching a third (31%) of the mobile Twitter audience admit
advertising helps them choose what they buy, compared to 23% of the
wider Twitter audience and 19% of internet users.
Mobile Twitter visitors are more likely than the general Twitter
audience to 'often' notice advertisements on the internet (40% vs
36%), but their extra receptivity does not end there. They are also
more likely to find TV adverts interesting and more likely to
notice the advertising in print media. From a marketing point of
view mobile Twitterers are an attractive target in their own right,
even before taking into account their potential for relaying
commercial messages virally.
As featured on Mediatel, January 2010

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