Facebook Sees Flood Of New Traffic From Teenagers And Adults

comScore released the results of a study on the visitation to Facebook.com, which showed the site grew to 26.6 million unique visitors in the U.S. in May 2007, marking an 89-percent increase versus the same month last year. The dramatic growth comes on the heels of Facebook.com’s decision in September 2006 to open up registration to the general public, a change from the previous policy requiring a valid email address from a university or a selected group of secondary schools and businesses.Growth at Facebook Takes Off After Open Registration
In the months prior to allowing open registration, Facebook.com’s traffic hovered at approximately 14 million visitors per month. However, after Facebook opened its doors to the general public, visitation accelerated to reach a level of 26.6 million visitors in May 2007, up 89 percent versus the same month last year and 100 percent versus September 2006.Meanwhile, the number of pages of content viewed at Facebook.com in May 2007 increased to 15.8 billion, up 143 percent versus May 2006 and 121 percent versus September. Visitors averaged 186 minutes at the site in May 2007, which marked a 35-percent increase versus the same month last year. Interestingly, engagement levels peaked in February 2007 at 200 minutes per visitor, then leveled off slightly as the influx of new visitors (who tend to begin as lighter users) tempered the average.Open Registration Brings Deluge of Teenagers and Young Adults to Facebook
Once a social networking haven for college students, Facebook’s decision to open registration has helped attract new visitors from outside the 18-24 year old age segment. In fact, the 38-percent increase among 18-24 year olds was the lowest rate of growth of the age segments represented in the study. The most dramatic growth occurred among 25-34 year olds (up 181 percent), while 12-17 year olds grew 149 percent and those age 35 and older grew 98 percent.”Given its roots as a college networking site, Facebook has historically shown very strong skews toward the 18-24 year old age segment,” said Jack Flanagan, executive vice president of comScore Media Metrix. “However, since the decision to open registration to everyone, the site has seen visitors from all age groups flood the site. As the overall visitation to Facebook continues to grow, the demographic composition of the site will likely more closely resemble that of the total Internet audience.”
http://www.comscore.com/press/release.asp?press=1519For media coverage, see:
Facebook grows by 89 per cent
The number of people using Facebook has nearly doubled in the past year, confirming the site’s position as the social network du jour. In May 26.6 million Americans visited Facebook, an increase of 89 per cent on the same month last year. Among users aged 25 to 34, the increase was 181 per cent, according to research conducted by comScore.
http://technology.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/tech_and_web/the_web/article2036442.ece
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/main.jhtml?xml=/money/2007/07/07/cnface107.xmlSocial networking shows explosive growth in Australia
New research shows that the use of social media such as YouTube in Australia is soaring pushing Australians onto international sites at the expense of local destinations. The findings were released this week at a press briefing held by Future Exploration Network and Nielsen/NetRatings, in the lead-up to the Future of Media Summit 2007 being staged in Sydney on 18 July.
http://www.itwire.com.au/content/view/13345/53/MySpace’s Slow Start in China
The social-networking site’s new Chinese version faces tough challenges trying to appeal to local tastes and grab market share from many rivals
http://businessweek.com/globalbiz/content/jun2007/gb20070625_607135.htmMySpace, Facebook: A Tale of Two Cultures
Emerging data suggest the two may not be direct competitors after all. Businesses that want to reach these audiences have more to learn: The blogosphere is buzzing about a provocative June 24 essay by U.C. Berkeley researcher Danah Boyd suggesting that MySpace and Facebook users are dividing along race and class lines. Even as her timely ethnographic observations touch off debate among users and Web developers, they underscore a question businesses have been asking since MySpace first launched: Who really uses these sites and what are they doing there? What can businesses learn from the emerging information about growing audiences on MySpace and Facebook, the largest of the online social-networking sites? We took a look at current data to ascertain who’s doing what, where, and how.
http://businessweek.com/innovate/content/jul2007/id2007072_502208.htm

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