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    Kammie Avant is a social media planner for Luckie who can usually be found knee-deep in analytics and sarcasm.
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Why teens aren't blogging.

Posted on Fri Feb 5 2010

Teenphone1

This week, the Pew Internet & American Life Project released the results of its fall 2009 survey focusing on the internet habits of teenagers (defined as 12 to 17) and Millennials (18 to 29).

While it's not necessarily news that teens haven't jumped on the Twitter train yet, what is interesting is the drop in teen activity on blogs. The study found that 14% of online teens were blogging, compared to 28% just in 2006. Additionally the number of teens commenting on blogs has dropped from 76% to 52% since 2006.

But this report isn't about changes in teen attitudes over the past few years. What it's highlighting is the result of drastic changes in the social media landscape.

In 2006, college-oriented Facebook was just two years old when it changed the social media game by opening up to high school students. Soon after, the city and regional networks would open it up to the entire world (and their cats).

Until then, blogging had been the best option for teens who wanted to express themselves and share with their friends. The problem is that blogging is a largely open form of communication and teens are a notoriously private bunch. Teenagers blogged because it was one of the only social channels available to them, not because it was necessarily the best fit.

Outside of LiveJournal, few blogging sites provided the level of privacy and security that teenagers want.  So it’s not surprising that, as soon as they had the option, teenagers retreated from the blogosphere and embraced Facebook, with its privacy settings, networks, friend requests, pictures, status updates, and so many groups, pages, and apps your head could explode with opportunities for self-expression.

Kammie Avant is a social media planner for Luckie & Company. You can contact her by e-mail or follow @KammieAvant on Twitter.

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Comments

Julia

Teens don't tweet because the 140 limit means they can't add exxxxxxtraaaaa letterssss to their worrrrdsssssss.

I'm friends on facebook with a few of my friends children, and this thing they do with the letters makes me want to shake my cane at them to get off my lawn.

Colleen

I agree with Julia! Does twitter let you curse like FB too? That would also explain a lot!

social bookmarking

Blogging is kind of boring for teens and young adults, who love to keep in touch with their friends on Social Networking sites such as Facebook and MySpace, according to a new study, Pew Internet & American Life Project report on social media and mobile Internet use among young people.

Colin Alsheimer

You know, I'm not that surprised that Teens aren't blogging. Not so much for the lack of privacy settings (which I get), but more because the benefit to blogging isn't as apparent to a teenager. I view blogging as more of a professional tool, and for most teens, that won't begin to matter until at least college.

Dan Wood

From what I remember of my teenage years (it wasn't *that* long ago) we didn't have a whole lot to say to each other but we wanted to be in constant contact. I would imagine that if I were back in highschool (with my shiny new BlackBerry Bold 9700 or iFone) I'd be texing like mad, sharing 100 photos a day on Facebook, and scratching my head for days trying to come up with something to say on a blog. Who the heck enjoyed writing essays back then anyway?!

John R. Sedivy

I wonder if this trend will stick to strictly teenagers or if it will expand to the general population as well? It would be interesting to know the blogging trend in general.

Tracy

Facebook means that teens have everything they need to express themselves online all in one forum. Many teens probably don't even follow blogs, let alone write them. Why would they venture away from something that already fits the bill?

Teens should start paying attention to blogs and other social websites though. Anyone who is interested in PR or social media as a career will need to show experience in online communication beyond Facebook if they want to land the gig. They need to show knowledge of a world outside of their Facebook bubble.

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