KEY FINDINGS NEWSLETTER

Winter 2001/2002 Issue

Teen Types
According to the Barna Research Group, today’s teenagers can be divided into four basic personality types. The chart below details the types’ temperaments.

Top 10 Advertising Jingles
According to Advertising Age magazine, the top jingle of the 20th century was McDonald’s “You deserve a break today.” The chart below lists other tunes making the top 10.

Single Women As Consumers
A variety of social trends contribute to the choices that women now have in how they live their life and the periods they experience as a single person. Greater career opportunities, higher divorce rates, longer life expectancy and cohabitation are among these. During 2001, over 17 million American women lived alone. This is more than double the number from 20 years ago. Even though they are spending for one, they are sought after as consumers. Many make jewelry purchases for themselves, take adventure trips with their girlfriends, and over one-half (57%) own their own homes.

Asian Americans Online
Asian Americans are more likely than Caucasians, African Americans and Hispanics to get a variety of information via the Internet. See the chart below.

 

Drug Usage by Adults
According to research conducted from February 1998 to December 1999 by the Slone Epidemiology Unit at Boston University, 81% of adults used at least one medication in the preceding week. This includes prescription drugs, over-the-counter remedies, and dietary and herbal supplements.

One-half of respondents took a prescription drug, 7% took five or more. The most used over-the-counter pain remedies included acetaminophen, ibuprofen and aspirin. Fourteen percent took herbal supplements. The most common were ginseng, ginko biloba, garlic, glucosamine and St. John’s wort.

Women age 65 and older were most likely to use medications and men ages 18-44 were the least likely. Popular medications used by women were conjugated estrogens and thyroid drugs. Men mostly used cardiovascular medicines and diuretics.

Executives Pad Resumes
Almost one-quarter (23%) of executives give false information on their resumes, with the most common item being the number of years the person spent in a job. The following chart shows other ways executives misrepresent themselves.

Television Watching
In spite of the surge in television channel availability, the average adult watches only 11 of 71 channels each week. Over a longer time, the number of channels watched increases: 18 in a one-month period and 25 over a 13-week cycle. As more channels have become available, the time spent per channel has dropped. During 2001, the average television home spent 3.8 hours per channel during a week, down from 5.5 hours in 1990 and 8.3 hours in 1980. However, total viewing time is on the rise. Average viewers watch 7 hours and 38 minutes, up from 6 hours and 55 minutes in 1990, and 6 hours and 36 minutes in 1980.

Bullets

  • The top New Year’s resolutions this year were “to enjoy life more” (67%) and “to spend more time with family and friends” (59%). In prior years, dieting and weight loss typically made the top spots.

  • Almost one-third (31%) of young adults age 18-24 think they will have accumulated at least $1 million by age 60.

  • The top five worries keeping men up at night are fear of aging, own weight, wife’s weight, career and personal finance. Women worry about personal finance, world issues, children, friends’ health and fear of aging.

  • When asked to pay for a previously free service online, American internet users found a free alternative (50%), stopped getting that information or service online (36%), or paid for it (12%).

  • Today, 33% of households own DVD players, up from 20% at the end of 2000. Eighteen percent of Americans say it will never be worthwhile to purchase one.

  • Most (80%) women and 83% of teenage girls think their mother is beautiful. Only 72% of sons think so.

  • Almost 6.9 million Americans took cruise vacations in 2000, up from 5.9 million in 1999.

  • Over 72,000 family farms disappeared between 1993 and 1999, a decline of 8%.

  • The residential cleaning (maid or cleaning service) market grew from $942 in 1995 to $1.66 billion in 1999.

  • Two million American fathers (8%) stay home with the children while the mothers work.

  • On average, men say they have 9.9 close friends; women have 9.2.

  • Almost three-quarters (73%) of teens age 12-17 use the Internet. Most of these (94%) use it when doing research for school projects.

  • One-quarter (25%) of children’s free time is spent playing today, compared to 41% in 1981.

  • While one out of every four women in the U.S. is obese, only three out of 100 female network television characters are obese. Thirty-two percent of female and 12% of male television characters are underweight, compared to 5% and 2%, respectively, of real people.

  • The number of widowers in the U.S. age 65 and older reached almost 2 million in 2000, up from 1.3 million in 1980.

  • Most gay men and lesbians (90%) are out to their friends, 80% to their families and 65% are out at the office.

  • When asked where they would like to live, 35% of Americans say they would prefer a rural area, 20% a suburb of a big city, 15% a small city, 12% a town, 9% a suburb of a small city and 8% a big city.

  • During 2000, about 5.5 million motorcycles were registered in the U.S.; 12% of these were in California. Almost 30% of all motorcycles are in four states: California, New York, Texas and Illinois. Registration growth in Texas and Louisiana is in excess of 60% since 1987.

  • More than 85% of Americans read at least one book during 2001. The mean number of books read was 14.5.

  • During 2001, 70% of Americans took a vacation away from home.

  • Nineteen percent of Americans traveled outside of the U.S. in 2001.

  • Many (68%) of young people age 15-25 have searched online for health information; 39% say they changed their behavior based on their findings.

  • When asked how important work is to them, 19% of Americans said “extremely important,” 55% said “very important,” 23% said “somewhat important,” 2% said “not too important,” and 1% said “not important at all.”

  • The number of document destruction companies has grown from about 20 in the early 1980s to around 500 today.

  • One-half of college students graduate with outstanding student loans; the average amount is $19,400.

  • Almost one-third (32%) of women and 26% of men wear a fragrance at least six days a week.

  • Almost one-third of the U.S. workforce regularly works more than the standard 40-hour week. About one-fifth works more than 50 hours in a typical week.

  • Almost six in 10 workers (59%) have experienced a romantic relationship with a coworker. One-third of all romances start in the workplace.

  • Just over one-quarter (26%) of the population was under age 18 in 2000. This proportion is expected to remain steady for the next 20 years.

  • On average, Americans eat ice cream 2.2 times per week. One-half (51%) eat it at least once a week while 6% never consume ice cream.

  • Over one-third (38.6%) of sales executives think their salespeople are underpaid.

  • Premiums for employer-sponsored health insurance rose 11.0% in 2001, compared to an increase of 8.3% in 2000 and 4.3% in 1999.

  • Almost half (48%) of employer-covered workers are enrolled in a preferred provider organization (PPOs), up from 41% in 2000 and 28% in 1996. During 1996, 31% were enrolled in health maintenance organizations (HMOs), compared to 23% today.

  • Purchases of diet aids (diet pills and meal replacements) jumped from $753 million in 1996 to $1,947 million in 2001.

  • Between 1947 and 2001, the percent of Americans who say alcohol has caused trouble in their family jumped from 15% to 36%.

  • Men get an average of 5.7 hours of uninterrupted sleep each night, compared to 5.2 hours for women.

  • The most popular month for starting a diet is March; January is the least popular.

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