Young Adults Prefer Ads in E-mail
MediaPost's Online Media Daily
Young Adults Prefer Ads In E-mail
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By Gavin O'Malley - Oct. 22, 2008

Sorry,
MySpace and Facebook--young adults report paying more attention to
marketing messages via e-mail and direct mail, according to new
research from Ball State University and ExactTarget.
Among 18- to-34-year-olds, consumers are more likely to be influenced
to make purchases based on e-mail marketing messages and direct mail
than from advertisements or marketing messages on social networks,
according to the white paper.
"It is too easy to assume that the media consumers who choose for their
own news, information and entertainment are by default the best media
to use for marketing messages," said Mike Bloxham, director of Insight
and Research at Ball State University's Center for Media Design. "This
is a dangerous assumption to make in a time when consumers are becoming
increasingly aware of their level of control over their media
experiences."
What's more, 20% of wired consumers have subscribed to marketing
communications via text messaging, more so than any other group--but
they want to receive texts only for urgent customer service issues such
as financial alerts or travel updates.
In addition, more than 50% of young homemakers use social networks and
text messaging during the day, but direct mail and e-mail are their two
preferred marketing channels.
The study was the work of Ball State's Center for Media Design and the
Indianapolis-based ExactTarget, an on-demand e-mail and one-to-one
marketing company. It combines CMD's observational data on people's
media use and exposure with ExactTarget's data on consumers' attitudes
toward marketing messages received through distinct channels.
Among the other findings: 81% of retired consumers have purchased
online, and 94% have been influenced by some form of direct marketing
to make a purchase.