Four times a year UK media industry watchdog Ofcom publishes a report on the media landscape.
Packed full of insight it is that rare thing of a free report that will help you if you work even just a little bit in digital communications.
It’s also a document that we often keen going back to so this time around we thought we’d fillet it and, because we love you, we thought we’d publish it in bite-sized chunks so it can help you too.
Much attention has been focussed on the fact that adults spend more time engaged with the media – eight hours 41 minutes – than they sleep which accounts fr eight hours 21 minutes.
More hidden in the report is the conclusion that the differing types of communicatin is leading to a generation gap. Where once post and the telephone was universal now young people only send a letter when they absolutely have to while the habit remains with older people.
The figures cover the first quarter of 2014.
An average day for a UK adult aged 16+ (selected)
2’58” watching live TV
1’19” listening to the radio.
0’47” email
0’40” recorded TV
0’36” websites or apps
0’29” phone calls
0’25” social media
0’15” newspapers (print or news website)
0’04” online news but not a news site
0’03” magazines
0’02” photo or video messaging
Popular UK social media sites
40.0 million YouTube
35.1 million Facebook
11.9 million Twitter
11.3 million LinkedIn
8.8 million Google Plus
0.9 million MySpace
0.4 million Friends Reunited
eBay overtook Amazon as the most popular retail site with 27.3 million users
Social media use by adults
2009 – 30 per cent
2010 – 40 per cent
2011 – 46 per cent
2012 – 50 per cent
2013 – 53 per cent
2014 – 54 per cent
News consumption
Television 75 per cent
Internet 41 per cent
Newspapers 40 per cent
Radio 36 per cent
General stats
Adults spend more time – eight hours 41 minutes – engaged with the media than time spent sleeping (eight hours 21 minutes.)
We are getting used to following two things at once. We may watch television and use the internet at the same time as 11 hours seven minutes worth f media is consumed in that eight hours 41 minutes.
We watch two hours 58 minutes of TV a day.
There are 83.1 mobile phones in the UK.
8 hours a month is spent on Facebook
Mail has fallen 5 per cent in 12-months
20 per cent of adults didn’t get an item of post in the last week.
77 per cent of all UK households have broadband.
79 per cent of homes have a PC or a laptop.
61 per cent of all adults own a smartphone.
57 per cent of all adults use their mobile phone to access the internet.
44 per cent of all UK households have a tablet.
60 per cent of adults say that technology confuses them.
49 per cent say technology isn’t making a difference to their lives either way.
24 per cent say technology is harming their lives.
16 per cent live in a mobile phone-only home.
Radio remains popular but is falling from 24.3 to 21.5 hours a week.
71 per cent of audio activity is radio.
2 per cent have used 3D printers.
82 per cent of households have an internet connection.
66 per cent say that they rely on the post.
Adults
46 per cent say they email fr work purposes out-of-hours.
23 per cent say they email about work while they are on holiday.
80 per cent say flexible working makes it hard to switch off.
51 minutes a day is social media use.
37 per cent of their time spent using the media is spent on watching TV.
2 per cent of their time spent using the media is spent on print media.
16 per cent of their time spent using the media is spent on text.
94 per cent watch live TV.
77 per cent use email.
71 per cent send SMS messages.
18 per cent of their time spent with the media is spent on social media.
41 per cent of adults use the internet to consume news.
Adults over 65
50 per cent overall have internet access at home.
66 per cent of adults 65 to 74 have internet access.
6 per cent of their time spent using the media is spent on print media.
49 per cent of their time spent using the media is spent on watching TV.
7 per cent of their time spent using the media is spent on text.
19 per cent play games on social media – the highest of any age group.
Young people aged 16-24-years-old
74 per cent use a social network.
4 and a half hours is the time they spend on media activity every day
If they use it they’ll spend one-and-a-half hours using social media a day.
They are watching less TV a day than they did. This has fallen to 148 minutes a day from 154
60 per cent get their news online – three times the amount of other adults.
1 per cent of their time spent using media is spent on print media.
24 per cent of their time spent using media is spent watching TV or films.
23 per cent of time spent using media is spent using text.
Young people aged 12-15
30 per cent are likely to use print media – half the adult average.
36 per cent of their media time is spent on social media – double the rate of adults.
Young people aged 6-15-years-old
60 per cent use a tablet.
75 per cent say they wouldn’t know what to do without technology.
70 per cent say they tell friends and family about new technology.
18 per cent use Snapchat.
Young people aged six-11-years-old
26 per cent of their time using the media is spent using social media.
Television stats
Digital TV take-up has risen from 84 per cent in 2008 to 95 per cent.
Smart TVs – web enabled TVs – have risen by five per centage points to 12 per cent in 12-months.
Smart TVs account for 45 per cent of TVs sold in the UK.
Picture credit
Only 83.1 mobile phones in the UK? Surely there are a few more than than that? 🙂