Hitwise Intelligence - Heather Hopkins - UK
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May 18, 2007
54% Increase put Silver Surfers at cusp of being largest group online
I realise it is risky to refer to those aged 55+ as "silver surfers" but it strikes me as a better term than "cotton tops" my parents' favoured label. In any case, it seems that those aged 55+, so-called silver surfers, are set to overtake 35-44 year olds as the demographic age group representing the largest share of UK Internet visits. Those aged 55+ represented 22.0% of UK visits to all categories of websites in the four weeks to 12th May 2007, up 54% since 2005 and 40% since 2006. This compares to 23.5% of Internet visits from 35-44 year olds.

The increase has come from rich and poor alike. The Experian Mosaic groups Twilight Subsistence (pensioners subsisting on meagre incomes) and Grey Perspectives (pensioners enjoying retirement with savings to supplement their pensions) have both increased their online footprint. Internet visits from Twilight subsistence are up 29% over the past two years and visits from Grey Perspectives are up 30%.

Among the top categories visited by those aged 55+, Search Engines, Adult and Shopping & Classifieds are the favourites, and are consistent with the most visited categories overall. The Telegraph reported this data yesterday pointing out that desire for salacious content does dwindle with age. Silver surfers show a particular fondness for Travel and News and Media websites, with these categories ranking higher among silver surfers. Last week, 27% of visits to Travel websites and 24% of visits to News and Media websites were from those aged 55+.
Money and leisure pursuits are more interesting to silver surfers than other demographic groups. Cruise, Family, Stocks and Shares, E-Greetings and Yachting and Boating websites receive the highest concentration of visits from silver surfers. Cruise websites, for example, received 48% of their traffic from UK Internet users aged 55+ in the four weeks to 12th May 2007.
Wealthy Groups Still More Active Online
Perhaps unsurprising but worth mentioning, comparing the percentage of UK Internet visits by Mosaic Group with the size of each group in the offline population reveals that the wealthiest groups are more active online than their less well-off counterparts. In particular, Symbols of Success and Urban Intelligence, which are among the groups most likely to earn a household income in excess of £50,000, are 22% and 31% overrepresented online. The groups Twilight Subsistence and Municipal Dependency, which are among the most likely to earn a household income of less than $7,4999, are 37% and 34% underrepresented online.
Posted by Heather Hopkins at 12:48 PM
Posted to Audience
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Comments
Interesting post Heather.
Out of interest do you know the how the proportion of online users (against overall population) compares currently across groups and how this is changing over time?
Thanks
Posted by: Steve jay at May 19, 2007 05:55 AM
Heather - what about those aged 17 and younger?
I take it their stats are lumped in with their parents, thus making the 35-44 and 45-54 (and to a lesser extent, the 25-34) age groups look bigger than they actually are?
Posted by: Robin Grant at May 20, 2007 12:03 PM
