“A” is for Apple’s iPhone
A recent blog post from cell phone analytics start-up Flurry suggested young consumers of Apple’s iPod touch would be future consumers of its iPhone later in life. “Apple is using the iPod touch to build loyalty with pre-teens and teens, even before they have their own phones (think: McDonalds' Happy Meal marketing strategy).” I didn’t get my first cell phone until my seventeenth birthday, and I considered myself to be on the cusp of the technological track. But if the assumptions are true, within the next five years, we will see a lot more tweens and teens using Apple’s high-tech mobile device.

Following in Apple’s footsteps, many companies are starting to realize teens are technologically savvier than older consumers. Sites like Mattel’s Everythinggirl.com and MyePets.com have created virtual online worlds that invite younger consumers to participate in interactive environments. And, in 2008, Disney Records, the online home for everything Hannah Montana and Jonas Brothers, led the list of Web video sites, with kids compromising more than 49 percent of its unique visitors.
But what does this increase in tech-literacy among American youth mean for marketers?
Teens are becoming a stronger force in online shopping and purchasing decisions and are extremely desirable marketing targets. In fact, the 2008 Global Habbo Youth Survey found 24 percent of teens are spending more than 15 hours a week online, and of those surveyed, 58 percent have made an online purchase and on average spend $46 per month – 26 percent spend $50 or more per month. Want more good news? Despite clothing, shoes, accessories and music ranking at the top of the list of online purchases, brand familiarity remains the driving force behind nearly 74 percent of all purchasing decisions among teens.
Maybe Flurry’s prediction is right. If younger consumers have purchasing control and if brand loyalty is achieved early in life, as in the case with Apple, perhaps we will begin seeing kids grabbing their lunch, kissing their parents goodbye and checking their Facebook app, all before catching the morning bus to school.
-- Emily Koruda, Fall 2009 Marketing Intern
Tags: mobile teens tweens research socialmedia
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