WORLD INTERNET PROJECT NEW ZEALAND 2007 Benchmark Survey findings PRINZ Webinar 12:30pm 25 September...

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WORLD INTERNET PROJECT

NEW ZEALAND

2007 Benchmark Survey findings

PRINZ Webinar 12:30pm 25 September

Allan BellCharles Crothers Ian GoodwinKarishma KripalaniKevin ShermanPhilippa SmithNigel Smith

World Internet Project – Survey background

International collaborative project

Social, political & economic impact of the Internet and new technologies

Longitudinal survey: 2nd survey 2009

Shared questions to allow international comparisons

Also questions designed specifically for New Zealand

September – October 2007

Conducted by Phoenix Research, Auckland

Telephone interviews

Usage of and attitudes towards the Internet and other communications technologies

2007 Benchmark Survey

Random sample of 1200

Plus booster sample: Maori, Pasifika, Asian

and 12-15 year olds

Weighting towards census proportions:

Age, gender, ethnicity, household size

1430 New Zealanders (16 years and over)

Sample design

Connection

Main reason for not using the internet

Sherman
REDO THIS GRAPH--IT LOOKS TOO DARK OR SOMETHING

Type of Internet Connection

Hours spent on the internet by type of access

Percent of users by type

Hours spent per week

New Zealandersrate the Internet

Sherman
GRAPH ONLY IMPORTANT, REMOVE NOT IMPT AND NEUTRAL

Activities online

Sherman
USE only 20+ Hours on graph
Sherman
USE ONLY WEEKLY AND DAILY ON GRAPH AND ADD OTHER QUESTION NUMBERS

Online financial transactions (in an average month)

Percentage of people

Note: Faded comparisons indicate no statistically significant difference

Sherman
USE ONLY WEEKLY AND DAILY ON GRAPH AND MAKE SURE SOURCE IS COMPLETE (ARE ANY QUESTIONS MISSING FROM SOURCE?)

Digital Divides

Socialising online

Sherman
GRAPH ONLY GENDER AND AGE (REMOVE OTHERS)
Sherman
GRAPH ONLY GENDER AND AGE (REMOVE OTHERS)

Conclusions

NZers rate the Internet

As an information source, the Internet is rated important by many more users than are traditional media.

As information source, the Internet rates for more users than do family and friends.

Most New Zealanders who use the Internet would find it a problem if they lost access.

Digital Divide

The Internet in New Zealand is age- and income-graded. The younger or wealthier people are, the more likely they are to use the Internet, the better their ability, the more important they rate it, the more they create content and socialize online.

As an ethnic group, Asians have the greatest engagement with the Internet.

Gender is mostly not a significant indicator of Internet usage and attitudes.

The shape of the Divide

Age Area IncomeGender

Content creation

New Zealand users, especially the young, are very active in content creation on the Internet. A quarter post messages and a third post images.

13% maintain their own website.

10% keep a blog, many more younger people.

Socialising effects

Socialising is a major Internet use, especially among the young.

Most users say the Internet has increased their contact with other people in New Zealand and overseas, with family and friends.

But some say they now spend less time face-to-face with the family they live with.

Socialising online

Three quarters of users check their email every day.

Every week a quarter go to social networking sites like MySpace or Facebook.

A quarter of users have made friends online, and half of these have gone on to meet in person.

Funders

Sample characteristics

Sampling strategy for WIPNZ 2007 sample