66%
of wired seniors had looked for health or medical information online at
some point in their online life by the end of 2003. That is a 13-point
jump since 2000, and a growth rate of 25%.
66%
of wired seniors had done product research online by the end of 2003. That
is an 18-point jump since 2000, and a growth rate of 38%.
47%
of online seniors had bought something on the Internet by the end of 2003.
That is an 11-point increase since 2000 and a growth rate of 31%.
41%
have made travel reservations online by the end of 2003. That is a
16-point increase since 2000 and a growth rate of 64%.
26%
of wired seniors had looked for religious and spiritual information by the
end of 2003. That is a 15-point jump since 2000, or a growth rate of 136%.
20%
of online seniors had done banking on the Internet by the end of 2003.
That is a 12-point increase since 2000 and a growth rate of 150%.
Despite the
significant gains among seniors, most Americans age 65 and older live
lives far removed from the Internet, know few people who use email or surf
the Web, and cannot imagine why they would spend money and time learning
how to use a computer. Seniors are also more likely than any other age
group to be living with some kind of disability, which could hinder their
capacity to get to a computer training center or read the small type on
many Web sites.
However, there is a
burgeoning group of Americans who are slightly younger than retirees and
who are vastly more attached to the online world. In fact, older Baby
Boomer Internet users (between 50-58 years old) are more like Generation X
Internet users (between 28 and 39 years old) than like their older,
“Mature” generational neighbors (those between 59 and 68 years old).
For example:
75%
of Generation X Internet users and 75% of Baby Boomer Internet users get
news online, compared to 67% of Mature users.
59% of Generation X
Internet users and 55% of Baby Boomer Internet users do research online
for their job, compared to 30% of Internet users between 59 and 68 years
old.
“The ‘silver
tsunami’ of older Internet users is gaining momentum,” says Lee Rainie,
director of the Pew Internet Project. “Internet users in their 50s who
work, shop, and keep in touch with friends and family online will age into
and transform the wired senior population.”
The report, titled “Older
Americans and the Internet,” is based primarily on survey data
collected between February 3 and March 1, 2004. The Pew Internet &
American Life Project is a non-profit, non-partisan research organization,
fully funded by the Pew Charitable Trusts to explore the social impact of
the Internet