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Kindle users are old

Posted May 01 2009, 05:44 AM by Douglas McIntyre
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Someone at technology news site, Cnet, came up with the clever idea of running a poll to learn the age of people who use Amazon’s (AMZN) miracle book reader, the Kindle. About 700 people responded, which puts the survey somewhat below what researchers would expect from Gallup, but it is a reasonable straw poll, nonetheless.

What surprised Cnet and what should surprise anyone who looks at the results is that 50% of the people who use Kindles are over 50 years old. About 27% were over 60.

Since the Kindle qualifies as “new technology”, it is supposed to find its initial market among the young and impressionable. The opposite appears to be true. People who should have fixed habits including reading physical books using reading glasses are buying an electronic book reader instead.

The Kindle is not cheap. With money being tight, it may be that older, affluent consumers are much more likely to spend $359 than the younger, unemployed people who will graduate from college this year. The e-books are expensive, too. A copy of “Master Your Metabolism: The 3 Diet Secrets to Naturally Balancing Your Hormones for a Hot and Healthy Body!” costs $9.99.

People under 50 are not likely to buy that book anyway. Buying a magazine is a better deal. An issue of The Reader’s Digest for Kindle costs only $1.25, but that is a publication for older people, as are most of the Kindle magazines which include old people favorites Forbes, The Atlantic, and US News. It is interesting that Teen People is not one of the magazine titles being offered for Kindle.

What marketers still don’t talk about is that old people with money are the largest consumers of a number of things besides multivitamins and sweaters. According to Forbes, the average age of the people who buy the extremely expensive and fast Porsche 911 is 51 years old. Their median annual income is $390,000.

That means that a great many of the people driving dangerously fast cars are in their late fifties and their sixties. Trying to sell Porsches to people under 40 is probably a waste of money, especially now that hedge fund managers are out of work.

The Kindle, the Porsche, and most other expensive and discretionary purchases made in the U.S. are made by older people. It is not unusual that Kindle sales spiked when Oprah said how much she loved the product. Oprah was born in 1954, and most of the people who watch her on TV or read her magazine are probably middle aged or older.

Amazon may be bothered by the fact that the public knows that Kindle buyers are not all young and fresh-faced like many of the people who own Apple (AAPL) iPhones. But, reading can be a good deal more expensive than talking, at least among voracious readers. The Kindle probably does not have many users who only read two or three books a year. That may not make the Amazon marketing management feel any better. Most marketers follow a simple rule when it comes to age. Old people will often want to buy what young people have. Young people never want what old people have, except for their money.

The Kindle is being bought by mature and well-to-do consumers. Amazon will just have to live with that.

Top Stocks blogger Douglas A. McIntyre is an editor at 24/7 Wall St.

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Comments

 

1. You're quoting an internet survey and pretending it has some scientific validity? Really?

2. The median age of people who read books is over 50. Of course the age of people who buy a device to read books will mirror that somewhat.

www.msnbc.msn.com/.../20381678

3. The Kindle doesn't support graphics. No pictures, see? If you took the pictures out of "Teen People" it would be about 1 page long. And you're surprised that it isn't offered as one of the choices?

We are old for much longer than we are young.  :)

The kindle is bascally an ebook reader device that will revolutionize the book industry.

-  http://www.eBookReader.us

I will now never buy a Kindle.

Are you really calling people over 50.... OLD ???  

I still think Kindle rocks.

Kindle The Electronic Reader Now On Apple iPhone, iPod

techunits.com/.../kindle_the_electronic_reader_now_on_apple_iphone__ipod

I'm 41 and I bought a Kindle 2 just over two months ago. In the time I've owned the device I've purchased thirteen books and a monthly newspaper subscription. Thus far I'm pleased with my purchase and the Kindle 2 has replaced the printed page as my reading medium of choice.

Most book readers allow you to alter print size, Im 51, and I bought mine (sony prs505), because when im getting tired and finding it hard to read, i can just up the print size and carry on. I also believe that older folk are more likely to be enthusiastic readers.

19 year old College student in Southern Maine, I proudly use my Kindle 2 where ever I go.  The Free whispernet (Sprint EVDO) \ Internet browser is extremely handy.  As soon as mainstream College textbooks are offered digitally you will see many more young people sporting a Kindle.

I use Kindle in class already as I convert my Powerpoint notes and essays onto my Kindle.  Forget index cards thats a thing of the past.  Everyone that sees the Kindle wants to know first what it is, secondly to play with it.

McIntyre is 52 years old this year. I guess that makes him old. Truth is that 60 is the new 40, according to AARP. That is, those 60 years old today are as healthy as their parents were at 40. So, maybe we ought to be redefining old. For me, you're not old until you're at least 85.

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