Australians use Facebook more frequently than newspapers and other traditional media websites, and large numbers engage in online activism of various forms, a major survey of social media habits has revealed.
Polling conducted by Essential Research on social media usage also reveals significant age and gender divisions.
Essential found 52% of Australians use Google at least daily, and 89% at least once a week, which is unsurprising. But 67% reported using Facebook at least once a week, with 46% using it at least daily. That’s far more frequently than newspaper websites: only 22% reported daily use, and 57% once a week. Usage of other news websites was broadly similar; after that came blogs (21% at least once a week), political and social campaign websites (18%).
Facebook also ranked highly as a source of news and information, with 28% of voters identifying Facebook as very or quite important as a source of news and information, compared to 43% who said the same about newspaper websites and 41% about other news websites. However, Google was easily the most important, identified by 52% as very or quite important.
Facebook is also more important to women: 53% of women reported using it at least daily, compared to 39% of men; a quarter of men never used it, compared to 19% of women. Unsurprisingly, younger people use it intensely — 74% of voters under 25 used it at least daily (only 3% never use it). Usage steadily decreases with age until only 23% of over-65s use it at least daily and 49% never use it. High-income earners also use Facebook more: 63% of those on incomes above $83,200 use it at least several times a week, much more than low-income earners.
The importance of Facebook as a source of information and news tracks usage fairly closely — women, younger people and higher-income earners all rate the site as more important than others.
Twitter remains the poor social media cousin. Only 6% of voters use Twitter at least daily; 15% use it once a week or more often; 71% say they never use it. Only 9% rate it as an important source of news and information. Usage is again concentrated among younger voters; there’s a view, and some evidence to suggest, that younger people ignore Twitter in favour of Facebook, but daily usage is highest among 18 to 24-year-olds (14%) and 25 to 34-year-olds (10%). Greens voters are also wildly over-represented among Twitter users — 17% of Greens voters report using Twitter at least daily, compared to 6% and 4% for Labor and Liberal voters, although the number of Greens voters is a small sample size.
Twitter usage is also greater among higher-income earners (there’s a recent study that purports to demonstrate Twitter users have higher cognitive skills than average).
And despite claims from conservative sections of the mainstream media that social media is unrepresentative of the broader community, 41% of voters say they have voted in an online poll, 33% say they have posted a comment on a website and another 15% say they have commented on a news website; 29% say they have signed an online petition. Men are more likely to comment on websites and vote in polls; women more likely to sign online petitions. Greens voters are more likely to do all of them except comment on news sites.
Of all those results, it’s Facebook’s 28% score as an important source of news and information that should be most concerning for the mainstream media. Throw in Twitter’s 9% (which seems to be slightly out of proportion to its usage) and it’s clear a substantial chunk of consumers — between a quarter and a third — are getting a lot of news via social media.
So, they’re not clicking on online articles from traditional news sites or, if they are, they’re going straight to the link distributed on Facebook or in a tweet, rather than through the homepage of the relevant website, cutting down opportunities to extend reader browsing time and expose them to more ads. Worse, it’s key marketing targets such as women and high-income earners that are doing it.
goggle, farcebuk, amazoon are all very big content Converters who will find out the hard way what happens when they trip over their too big boots. they all want too much and will cheat, apply their own rules and pay no tax because Lichtenstein/Luxembourg tax haven Status. Extra judicial rules/laws will be enforced because they can. Cheat, Steal and Deny, Always Distract.
I’d want to see the original survey, but it seems to me conflating “news AND information” in the one question makes it next to useless. At least in terms of the analysis you’re trying to draw.
The mainstream media would want to know about people’s sources of ‘news’. ‘Information’ could be all sorts of other things people would seek on Facebook and Google. I’d be cautious about drawing any conclusions re people’s media consumption from this survey.
Agree with izatso?.
Google, Twitter etc are the great thieves or enablers of thieves on intellectual content and pay minimal tax on huge profits made in this country and indeed, every country. I’m not usually a supporter of Rupert Murdoch but he is correct on this.
Every time one of these rapacious profit making entities is called to account as Twitter & Facebook have recently over trolls of the very ugliest type, they have to be dragged kicking and screaming to the table constantly parroting the USA’s very dodgy claim of ‘free speech’ yet are they base themselves in tax havens.
Indeed- only a few months ago but before the latest Twitter attacks on a TV star and the shocking Facebook pages about a Melbourne murder, when I made a comment on a forum how Google etc were basically out of control and beholden to no-one, my previous comments on here were tracked down and I was labelled a “nutcase” with a bizarre gripe against the internet.
Twitter/Google do not produce news, they link to news and unless the real providers of news such as our local networks and newspapers are not supported we will be left with a mish mash of opinions.
I also questioned Bernard Keane’s claim that it was an imposition that Twitter should be made to try and censor defamatory posts before they are made.
The only reason it’s difficult is because like Facebook & Google, Twitter employ a tiny fraction of the staff a similar financial sized corporations need employ and unlike almost any other industry, can base themselves in cyberspace.
Try and get to anyone in any position of authority in Google Australia with a genuine lawful complaint (and legal papers to back it up) about a breach of their own rules, it’s impossible.
We either live in a country that makes it’s own laws for the benefit of it’s citizens or we live in a world where Mark Zuckerberg is presented to us as some sort of entity to worship, something I’m sure thousands of mum & dad investors now regret.
“57% once a week”…reasonable numbers for newspaper websites I would have thought…Facebook is not a news site and google is the ultimate aggregator, they don’t actually produce anything but money (for themselves)
I really have trouble calling facebook ‘media’, there must be another way of describing them