|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Report: Net use rises among blue-collar workers
(IDG) -- Despite the slowdown that has hit the U.S. economy, more laborers and factory workers than any other segment of the population went online for the first time in the last year, according to a new report released Thursday by Nielsen/NetRatings. The report found that 9.6 million blue-collar workers were online as of March 2001, up from 6.2 million in March of 2000. That rate of growth -- 52 percent -- is more than twice the rate of overall Internet usage growth, according to Nielsen/NetRatings' measurements. These users spent an average of 11 hours online and viewed 698 Web pages in March of this year, spread across an average of 18 sessions on the Internet.
The second-fastest-growing group of 'Net users was homemakers, who saw a 49 percent jump to a total online population of 2.5 million. Service workers were online to the tune of 2.9 million people, 37 percent higher than the year before. Salespeople also saw their ranks swell by 37 percent, to 5.6 million users. Professionals form the largest single category of Internet users, according NetRatings' measurements, at 18.5 million, up 23 percent. There were 14.4 million executives/managers using the Internet, for a 21 percent rise, and 8.5 million retirees, up 28 percent. A broader group of U.S. residents spread across different incomes, races and occupations are getting online now thanks to free ISPs, such as Bluelight.com and NetZero, and low-cost PCs, said T.S. Kelly, director of Internet Media Strategies at Nielsen/NetRatings. Most low-, middle- and fixed-income Internet users are still connecting via modems, with only the higher-income and higher-educated users accessing the 'Net over broadband, Kelly said. E-mail, long the Internet's dominant application, "is becoming increasingly attractive to a broader audience" and thus bringing more people online, he said. Eventually, more users will likely have broadband connections, but not until prices come down and online content becomes more compelling, Kelly said. Nielsen/NetRatings' numbers are derived from its sample of more than 70,000 U.S. residents. The company tracks users' actions online, with permission, to determine usage volume and type. The behavior of the 70,000 users is extrapolated to cover the whole country's population. Nielsen has more than 220,000 registered users worldwide. RELATED STORIES:
Study: All Net users vulnerable to online fraud RELATED IDG.net STORIES:
Controlling unsolicited bulk e-mail RELATED SITES:
Nielsen NetRatings |
SCI-TECH
Study: Gadget sales flat Protest slams Dell's use of prison labor Steve Jobs keeps Apple in the limelight (MORE)
N. Y. plans to heal skyline Stocks rise on Case departure Lieberman's presidential announcement today New arrests may be linked to UK ricin scare (MORE)
Jordan says farewell for the third time Shaq could miss playoff game for child's birth Ex-USOC official says athletes bent drug rules (MORE)
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Back to the top |
© 2003 Cable News Network LP, LLLP.
A Time Warner Company. All Rights Reserved. Terms under which this service is provided to you. Read our privacy guidelines. Contact us. |