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Internet Travel Monitor - Marketing & Research
January 23, 2008
Who Doesn't Use the Internet?
NEW YORK, NY – More than you might think.
US consumers generally enjoy widespread Internet access. While the Web was once the playground of affluent early adopters, the demographic profile of the US Internet user now resembles that of most Americans.
Nonetheless, about one-quarter of Americans have no Internet access, according to a wide-ranging report titled "Information Searches That Solve Problems: How People Use the Internet, Libraries and Government Agencies When They Need Help" by the Pew Internet & American Life Project and the Graduate School of Library and Information Science at the University of Illinois at Champaign-Urbana.

For marketers working on multimedia campaigns, knowing who the non-users are can help determine media buys—and avoid wasting Web efforts targeting consumers who will never get the message.
Pew said that those with limited access or no access to the Internet tended to be older, less affluent and less well educated.

The organization also studied the demographics of those with "low access," meaning either no access or only dial-up access.
When dial-up users were added in, demographic differences fell away. In other words, the low-access group had similar characteristics to Internet users as a whole. As the researchers put it, "demographic predictors are evident only within the 24% of those with no access at all."
Pew's data lined up quite closely with that of other researchers. Pew's US broadband penetration number of 55%, for instance, is close to eMarketer's 2007 estimate of 53.6%.
Copyright 2008 eMarketer Inc. All rights
reserved. From http://www.emarketer.com.
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