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Should You Market to Seniors Online?

March 3rd, 2009 by Larisa Redins

According to a Pew Research Center’s 2006-2008 Internet and American Life Project Surveys, there are increased numbers of seniors becoming Internet users.  While half of all adults online are between the ages of 18 and 44, in 2008, 45% of seniors between the ages of 70 and 75 were online.  Conversely in 2005, this total was only 26%.  An impressive increase!

Further, a 2006 study from eMarketer discovered that 17.7 million Internet users aged 62 and over were also using the Internet.

It’s no surprise that email appears to be the favorite means of communication for 70 to 75 year olds.  Specifically reports find, almost 75% of people aged 64 and over use email.

Besides communicating via email, seniors are likely to use the Internet for research purposes.  Some of the topics that interest them include travel, health and fitness information, financial information, online news, religious information, and general hobby information.

Why is this information important to you?

Well, according to the Pew Research Center surveys 47% of all seniors online make purchases on the Internet. Perhaps more importantly, this group of people is quite financially affluent.  For instance, in a 2008 Focalyst and Dynamic Logic report (pdf), it was discovered that Internet users 62 years of age and up report an annual income  almost double that of their non-Internet user counterparts.  Moreover, the online users spent approximately $700 more than individuals who were not online.

How Then Should You Market to Seniors?

If you want to reach this niche and potentially lucrative audience, you should strive to keep things simple on your website. Here are some tips that will help you appeal to seniors:

  • Ensure that the font on your website and emails are easy to read.  For instance, you should always use a dark font on a light background.
  • Keep jargon and slang to a minimum.
  • Trust is crucial. Make sure that you gain the trust of seniors by providing a well-written “About Us” section on your website and third party testimonials about your product or services.
  • Link to other websites so that people who desire more information can easily find what they are looking for.
  • Make the checkout process as simple and straightforward as possible.
  • Consider creating a niche site for an older audience if you are worried about the problems involved with catering to both young people and older people.

Overall, while there may not be as many seniors online as younger people, the lucrative online senior market is relativelly untapped and growing at a fast pace.

4 Comments

Very good and important information. As I have a blog focused on baby boomers I really wanted seniors but was not sure that was a viable market.

Thanks

Aunt Nancy said:

Thanks for the tips, as one of my target audiences is grandparents. Follow up article…some of the top sites seniors visit. Cheers.

Seniors are online, and they are definitely a growing population. And combined with the Boomers, they are the fastest growing population on the net. However, as this article points out, email is huge amongst seniors. More importantly, Boomers and Seniors behave differently online (they don’t leave as much of a digital footprint such as leaving comments or making posts). So how can you reach them online? How do you know where they are and if they are even there?

We have a metric and strategy called the Meaningful Online Engagement Model, that measures not just where they are online, but how engaged they really are. We have a book that is about to come out: Dot Boom: Marketing to Baby Boomers Through Meaningful Online Engagement. check it out at http://www.dotboombook.com, or visit our site at wwww.immersionactive.com.

Killer said:

Seniors typically spend most of their online time reading email. They might go online to shop but are much more likely to purchase in person if they can. While I agree this is a market that will begin to grow in the coming years, right now, it is not a big market.

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