Recently I was able to review a Jupiter Research report about the behavior and habits of wealthy people online. ‘Demographic Profile: Affluents Online’ (released March 1) describes the types of activities affluent people do online, how many hours per week they devote to media, and what types of online content they trust. The data comes from a recent survey Jupiter Research conducted in 2006.
It’s a pretty interesting report, though not very surprising. Without revealing too much of the report (you can purchase it online here), affluent people (defined as those with incomes of $100,000 or more) have greater activity in every online category Jupiter identified except for adult content and gaming. The gap between affluents and nonaffluents was particularly large with regard to financial services (understandably) and engagement to social media (i.e. instant messaging, reading/writing blogs).
Affluent people spend more time engaged with media compared with nonaffluent people, especially with regard to listening to music (5 more hours per week than nonaffluents) and going online (3 more hours per week). Affluent people are also generally more skeptical of online advertising, though 70% trust product reviews and other opinion on companies’ websites (compared to a 66% trust level from nonaffluent people).
Knowing what affluent people do online certainly helps luxury brands and retailers know where to direct their marketing efforts. That affluent people trust product reviews on company websites is interesting; perhaps it shows that the money luxury brands spend to develop interactive websites is money well spent.
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