More
US adults use LinkedIn and Pinterest than Twitter, but that website
attracts a greater proportion of blacks and young adults than do its
social media peers, a Pew Research Center study released on Monday
showed.
Photo pin-up site Pinterest spiked in
popularity over the past year, according to the survey, a poll of 1,445
Internet users aged 18 and older. About 21 per cent of respondents said
they employ the service, up sharply from 15 per cent in a similar survey
conducted a year ago.
The figure was 22 per
cent for LinkedIn and 18 per cent for Twitter, holding roughly steady
from a year ago. About 29 per cent of the blacks surveyed by Pew made
use of Twitter, well above 16 per cent for whites and Hispanics, the
study showed. ()
Twitter ranks higher than
Pinterest in terms of engagement, however: 46 per cent of users surveyed
go onto the online messaging service daily, versus 23 per cent for
Pinterest and just 13 per cent for LinkedIn.
Industry
experts have said Twitter is less intuitive than Facebook and thus can
turn off users, curtailing its growth as a mainstream social media
platform.
According to a Reuters/Ipsos poll
conducted in October, 36 per cent of 1,067 people who have joined
Twitter say they do not use it, and 7 per cent say they have shut their
account. In contrast, only 7 per cent of 2,449 Facebook members report
not using the online social network, and 5 per cent say they have shut
down their account.
The Pew study polled users
of Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, LinkedIn and Pinterest - five of the
largest US social media services.
About 71 per
cent of respondents said they used Facebook , up from 67 per cent a
year earlier and granting it the highest popularity ranking. But some
analysts speculate that younger users are gravitating away from
Facebook, the world's largest social network, and toward newer services
such as SnapChat or Instagram.
"Facebook is
the dominant social networking platform in the number of users, but a
striking number of users are now diversifying onto other platforms," the
Pew study read.
"Pinterest holds particular
appeal to female users (women are four times as likely as men to be
Pinterest users), and LinkedIn is especially popular among college
graduates and Internet users in higher-income households."
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