Subscribe by Email

Your email:
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Youtube Google+ Inbound Marketing Blog

Inbound Marketing Agency Blog

Current Articles | RSS Feed RSS Feed

Why Baby Boomers Love Social Media

 

Boomers are all over social media, especially Facebook, according to a recent report. Wondering why these old farts (like me) are updating their profiles, tweeting, and otherwise hanging out in social space? Actually, it's in our upbringing and collective life experience. We love social media because it reminds us of who we are.

baby boomers love social mediaIf you watched Tom Brokaw's special "Boomers!" last night, and you aren't a baby boomer, you got a glimpse of what makes us boomers tick. We were born after WWII and the Korean War, and most of us grew up in the 'burbs built during the post-war 50's. We were hooked on TV dinners and TV shows like Laugh-In and the Monkeys. We were influenced by space exploration and devastating events like the JFK and MLK assassinations. We entered puberty under the heavy shadow of Vietnam and the Cold War. Many of us became rebellious and many more experimented in everything including sex and drugs and rock-and-roll. We turned to each other for support and we banned together like no other generation before or since. As we grew up we became obsessed with material things and we bought it all on revolving credit, even though our parents warned us that someday (i.e. now) it would all come crashing down on us. 

So now where are we boomers, and why are we into social media, tools that were designed for kids?

  1. We love to experiment. Remember?
  2. We lost touch with each other along the way, and we yearn to get back to that age of discovery and togetherness.
  3. We need each other more than ever since the dream has turned into a massive recession.
  4. Most of us have turned into empty nesters, so we actually have time for things other than kids and work. Not enough time to go visit each other much, but plenty to hook up on FB.
  5. Lots of us have been displaced from those jobs we depended on for so long, and now we need help finding new ways to make money.
  6. We never lost that urge to be playful and have fun. It was just buried under a ton of responsibilities.
 Hey all you boomers out there, how do you use social media and what works for you (or doesn't)?

Comments

John, as a fellow baby boomer [but as I like to say - I am a tail-end baby boomer], I think that the increasing use of social media by our generation will ultimately provide great historical insight into the impact of those events that shaped us (including black and white and living color).
Posted @ Friday, March 05, 2010 4:45 PM by Mary Ann Halford
Must confess, I'm a Boomer (1953) and social media makes total sense to me. Facebook is increasingly beloved. Twitter is still an unknown quantity, but I persist in suspecting that it's the writing on the wall.LinkedIn provides awesome connections that are truly nurturing.  
 
Go figure. The hippies' one world dream is realized through technology. 
 
Posted @ Friday, March 05, 2010 5:35 PM by Mary H Ruth
@mary ann 
That would be cool. Maybe we can compile a reaaly interesting group memory that our kids and grandkids can either enjoy or (sadly) ignore. 
 
@mary h 
Nothing to confess! Being a boomer is cool. Hey, we made it this far didn't we? I'm finding Twitter more and more effective and useful. Mary Ann and I joined in a really interesting Twitter chat today - happens all the time. Maybe we'll co-blog about it next week.
Posted @ Friday, March 05, 2010 5:56 PM by John McTigue
Twitter's fun and I'm on Facebook, though I don't quite get that one. But, LinkedIn is very useful, especially because it's got lots of niche groups.  
 
It's a pleasure to connect with other boomers here. Thanks.
Posted @ Sunday, March 07, 2010 7:45 AM by lynpym
Lynette, 
 
I agree - for professionals, LinkedIn can't be beat for research and formal engagement. Twitter best for quick-hits and comments. Facebook is sorta in-between. Less formal, a bit less useful - but the potential reach is unbeatable.
Posted @ Sunday, March 07, 2010 2:19 PM by John McTigue
When finding lost friends, colleagues, and acquaintences, today we have tools that cannot be equaled. I lost track of a very good friend in 1999, and this week decided to try and find him - it took less than 5 minutes using Linkedin and Facebook. I'd love to hear John McT's take on the ease of locating people you have known, what impact that can have if you are on that second career he mentions above in #5, and how to use long-time friendships to take any marketing campaign to the next level...
Posted @ Sunday, March 07, 2010 4:31 PM by Martin L
@Martin, 
 
Pretty amazing, huh? Seems in the 80's, 90's and 00's we were so into our own lives we all forgot about each other - only way I can explain it. Now social media says, you can run but you can't hide (unless you choose to ignore friend requests etc). Maybe now we will all do more reaching out and less worrying about #1. I don't know - maybe we will anyway.
Posted @ Sunday, March 07, 2010 6:30 PM by John McTigue
Comments have been closed for this article.