African American influentials are much more likely to make business contacts online (52 percent) than US influentials as a whole (28 percent) - but they are less likely to “make friends online” (39 percent vs. 58 percent), according to a study by Burson-Marsteller, reports MarketingCharts.
The study focused on the ways this influential consumer group, dubbed the African American-fluentials, communicates online and offline. The study is part of Burson-Marsteller’s “e-fluentials” series of studies examining influential consumers.
African American-fluentials are also less likely to be active on a social networking site (49 percent), such as Facebook, than the general population of online influencers (76 percent). (On the online activities of African American-fluentials see chart one & two.)
“African American-fluentials tend to embrace the web for business and ’serious’ pursuits while favoring a range of offline communications tools for social networking,” said Mireille Grangenois, managing director, US Multicultural. “They are twice as likely to use handwritten notes than US e-fluentials but half as likely to write blog entries.”
(See chart of methods of talking about a good or bad product/service experience.)
Among other key findings of the study:
“Young people in the African American community are particularly value-oriented,” says Mark Penn, CEO of Burson-Marsteller and author of Microtrends: The Small Forces Behind Tomorrow’s Big Changes.
“There is an emerging group of African American youth poised to enrich and lead society in substantial ways. They are not only a serious target audience for the technology, apparel, sports and entertainment industries, but also are ready recruits for college, job, volunteer and leadership opportunities at every level.”
Among the study’s other findings:
About the survey: Burson-Marsteller partnered with MSI International to conduct a survey of online US African Americans, age 18 and older. A total of 1,000 online interviews were completed.
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