There's no two ways about it: Parents are not cool. Nothing against your parents or against you if you are a parent yourself; but there is no question that in the big Venn diagram of life,
"parents" and "cool" exist in two totally separate, mutually exclusive circles. No parents are cool, and nothing which is cool is parental. The same rule holds for locations both real and virtual: If
your parents are somewhere, that place cannot be cool.
This eternal truth has been confirmed for the umpteenth time by a survey from ROI World, conducted April 26-29, which asked 300 teen
boys and 300 teen girls about their use of online social networks via OTX's Online Sample Community. Overall, as one might expect the ROI World study found very high rates of participation in social
networks in general: the respondents said they spent a whopping 80% of their online time (an average 1 hour and 50 minutes per day) on social networks. Also unsurprisingly, Facebook dominates teen
social network usage, with 78% of respondents saying they created a profile at some time -- but ROI World found evidence of what it termed "Facebook fatigue."
Specifically, 19% of teens who
created a Facebook profile said they are spending less time on the site than they did a year ago, or have stopped visiting it altogether, with the largest group -- 49% -- saying their use began
falling off within the last three months (29% in the last month). And it appears that the arrival of parents and old people in general motivate some teens to ditch out (by the way, if you are offended
by my use of the word "old" in this context, then that means you are really, really old and also have no sense of humor). 16% of respondents who left Facebook or use it less said they did so because
their parents joined, while 14% said they did so because there are "too many adults/older people." The timing of these trends would seem to correspond to other data suggesting a rising proportion of older users on Facebook compared to other sites like MySpace.
Admittedly these aren't huge proportions of the total user base. Crunching the numbers, that comes to about 6% of all teen respondents leaving or using Facebook less because of their parents or
Ye Old Folkes. But the real question, to my mind, is whether their rejection is symptomatic of a more widespread perception among teens that these sites are somehow less cool, edgy, or what-have-you,
than they used to be. A second, subsidiary question is whether this perceptual shift has an effect on the "halo" effect enjoyed by advertisers from placing ads in a cool context. I don't have the
answers to these questions, but they are food for thought.
But anyway let's not get all depressed about being old and chronically, nay terminally uncool. There are actually some very promising
findings for the future of online marketing and e-commerce on social networks. The ROI World survey also discovered that 43% of the teen respondents surveyed had spent money on social networks. This
includes 7% who have purchased a "virtual gift" for a friend, and 15% who have purchased currency in a game to buy virtual items. Significantly, over a third of teens who play games on Facebook say
that these games account for 50% or more of the time they spend on the site -- data which highlights the issue of user engagement, at the center of the power struggle between Zynga and Facebook which
I discussed earlier this year.