T-Mobile announced a new set of services (Family Allowances) today targeted toward parents with children with cell phones. It allows parents to set limits on minutes, messages and downloads. Parents also have the ability to limit use to specific times of the day while still allowing for “necessary” calls (i.e., Mom calling). Our research has shown that these services address real pain points for parents and teens. Nearly one-sixth of teens surveyed reported that they argued with their parents about their cell phone bills and had issues with their bills being too high. On the flip side, approximately one-fifth of parents were willing to pay for a range of services giving them the ability to manage monthly expenses and limit usage by their children. At $2 per month, it should be a no-brainer to add this feature to their plans.
T-Mobile Hits Market with New Services Targeted Towards Parents
‘Getting down’ with Gen Y: 10 ways marketers can connect with millennials
Generation Y represents an important demographic for marketers, yet with a sceptical view of the world they can be a difficult group to market to successfully. BBBBBB outlines how your marketing can make an impression on the millennials.
Sep 8, 2008: Mobile Web Megatrends at University of California Berkeley- Pacific Film Archive
The Mobile Web Megatrends is a unique one day event that addresses the strategy and best practices relating to key current trends for the Mobile Web.
The simple idea behind Mobile Web Megatrends is to create a small, niche event focused on developments that are key to the Mobile Web currently (2008/2009)
This means that the event will be much more focused and granular.. For instance - we don't want to talk about 'Nokia' but rather about Nokia S40 6th edition which has implications for the mass market.
Similarly, Opera Mobile 9.5 is significant due to features such as implementation of Google Gears. Thus, the event will have a much more granular, interactive focus than other events.
Some of the topics we will cover (note this is a indicative list only at this stage)
• The evolution of the browser(Opera, Nokia)
• Location based services 2.0 - (Cell id databases)
• APIs - network(GSMA, OpenAjax, Bondi)
• Widgets
• Advertising models including analytics
• Mobile social networks
• iPhone (including iStore)
• Android
• Nokia S40 6th edition – the impact on mass market phones
• Flashlite
• Mobile Web demographics – the numbers, uptake figures, impact of flat rate etc
• Browser plugins
• Enterprise and Mobile Web
• Cloud computing
• Emerging markets
• QR codes and
• Offline Browsing
The discussion will focus on the strategy, implementation, competitive advantages and the pitfalls of these trends. This unique opportunitiy to get an unbiased viewpoint with the opportunity to discuss these developments. You can clarify your thinking from the experience of others and keep the conversation going through an ongoing attendees only discussion forum.
Communications: Youth smoking falls with rising mobile phone ownership
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New Feature: Ypulse Toolbox, 10 Free Resource Every Youth Marketer Should Be Using
Let me say upfront that I am copying a popular feature on Mashable and attempting to adapt it for Ypulse. The Ypulse Toolbox will be an occasional feature that lists websites and/or ideas that will ideally help you do your job better. If you have an idea for a Ypulse Toolbox you would like to see, let us know and we’ll attempt to pull it together. My goal is to keep these less generic and more youth media/marketing specific. For our first feature, I’m going to share 10 sites/resources anyone trying to reach [#%0#2]youth[/#%0#2] should Bookmark. Obviously, I don’t need to tell you to read Ypulse, you’re already here!
1. MTV News Whatever your thoughts are on the relevance of MTV, the channel invests heavily in researching their demographic and knowing what teens (collective) want. Reading MTV News online is basically reading headlines handpicked by editors who are deciding what entertainment news is most relevant to their audience. It’s worth checking on a daily basis. You can also sign up for MTV Sticky, a free trend email from MTV’s research department.
2. Cynopsis Kids - If you’re trying to reach tweens and want to stay on top of the latest news in licensing, kids/tween TV and movies, this daily newsletter is a must read.
3. TrendCentral - Yes, they are an advertiser. And yes, I often see stuff I covered on Ypulse appear days or weeks later in the editorial, but they cover trends in a much wider scope and go to lots of the big trade shows I can’t — Magic, the licensing show, etc. You can go to the site or sign up for their newsletter.
4. My High School Journalism Obviously this site is dead during the summer months when school’s out, but this fall you should definitely check in on a weekly basis. This is the gateway to loads of high school newspaper websites and a way to see what teens think are important issues both at their school and in the world.
5. Next Great Thing Youth. Mobile. Trends. Fleishman’s blog description says it all. They do nice roundups of [#%0#3]youth[/#%0#3] oriented mobile links along with more in-depth posts on what’s happening in this space.
6. Trends & Tudes - Harris Interactive (a sponsor of Ypulse Research) has a monthly e-newsletter that highlights [#%1#2]research[/#%1#2] they’ve done for their clients. They don’t just offer numbers but always offer insights you can pull from the [#%1#3]research[/#%1#3], whether it’s on bullying at school or college students today.
7. The Pew Internet & American Life Project - Pew produces free reports on how teens are using the internet. Every one is a free goldmine of information.
8. CNET/Digital Kids Coverage This used to be a blog but now is a way to search CNET News for all of their [#%0#4]youth[/#%0#4] and technology oriented stories and posts.
9. danah boyd’s research danah is one of the few academics who consciously strives to make as much of her [#%1#4]research[/#%1#4] free and available online. Not only that, it’s required reading if you’re focused on [#%0#5]youth[/#%0#5] and social media.
10. Youth Media Exchange If you are interested in social change and want to know what young people all over the world are concerned about, YME is a great resource and a truly international [#%0#6]youth[/#%0#6] activism site. Worth checking to get a global pulse of what [#%0#7]youth[/#%0#7] activists are thinking (and doing) around the world. Also a great resource for corporations looking to partner or create global pro-social campaigns.
What’s the Difference Between Gen X and Gen Y?
Teenage Behavior
Studying teenage behavior reveals a lot about the future. While teens tend to be replicants of their parents, it’s their unconventional, non-biased nature that makes teenagers so appealing to marketers. So, are they truly the multitasking, non-brand-loyal, technology-savvy neo-conservatives as everyone paints them to be?
We know that kids are growing up faster. Mattel coined the term “KAGOY” – Kids Are Growing Older Younger” – to describe this phenomenon. That’s why so many news reports focus on the early ages at which teens begin to use cosmetics or dress “inappropriately.”
The latest teen malapropism? Taking naked pictures of themselves on their cellphones and sending them to boyfriends and girlfriends. Last year, 18 students at a Castle Rock, Colo. middle school sent around nude photos of themselves. Other cases have been reported in New Jersey, New York, Alabama, Utah, Pennsylvania, Texas and Connecticut, notes USA Today. Here are a few more contemporary, young-adult phenomena:
- DWT – A Liberty Mutual study of more than 900 teens released in July 2007, found that nearly 50% of teens admit to driving while texting. And with about 73% of teenagers owning cell phones as of 2007, according to Tween & Teen Lifestyle Report, expect the incidence of DWT to merely rise in the future.

MyDeathSpace, a tribute to deceased members of MySpace, features a growing number of examples of teen victims of “DWT” – driving while texting. More than 50% of teens report texting while driving, although a growing number of states are outlawing the practice.
- Multitasking – On average, teens perform about three to four other tasks while surfing the Internet and two to three others tasks while watching television, a study commissioned by Yahoo and the OMD ad agency reported in 2005. Some 73% of TV-online multitasking kids are engaged in “active multitasking,” defined as content in one medium influencing concurrent behavior in another, a 33% increase in active multitasking since 2002, notes a 2008 Grunwald Associates social networking study.
- Neo-Conservatism – U.S. teens appear to be more conservative than many of their global counterparts, including teenagers from India, China, Germany and France, according to a February 2006 Energy BBDO GenWorld Teen study. About half of U.S. teens qualify as “Red Teens” with strong conservative views, while the remaining half, Blue Teens, emphasize individuality and tend to reject tradition. Red Teens are more likely to believe in God (89% vs. 55% globally) and that abortion is never justified (40% vs. 12%).
- Advertising – Cultural differences also influence marketing. The Yahoo/OMD study found that teens in developing countries are more receptive to advertising than teens in developed countries. More than half of teens surveyed in Mexico and China and 68% in India agree that advertising is a good way to learn about trends and things to buy. Thirty-five percent or less of teens surveyed in France, Germany and the U.S. think so.
- Sexual Practices – In 2005, the National Center for Health Statistics released the U.S. government’s most comprehensive survey of sexual practices and found that more than half of all teenagers ages 15-19 have engaged in oral sex, including nearly a quarter of those who have never had intercourse.

If the names no longer sound familiar to you, you’re too old. Zac Efron, the star of Disney’s megahit, High School Musical, is the current female teen heartthrob. Miley Cyrus, Disney’s Hannah Montana star, displayed her teen spirit in a Vanity Fair photo that created a publicity storm, Britney-style.
- Alcohol/Drug Use – A 2007 National Institute on Drug Abuse annual survey found that the proportion of 8th graders reporting use of an illicit drug at least once in the past 12 months was 13% in 2007, down nearly half from 24% in 1996. But by the time teens become 10th graders, drug use rises to 28%, although that figure is down from 39% in 1997. Among 12th graders, drug use rises to 36%, a decline from a peak of 42% in 1997. There was a significant increase in the use of OxyContin among 12th-graders, with 10% of 12th-graders reported using the painkiller Vicodin, while 6% reported using OxyContin in the past year. Also noted was the significant increase in the use of sedatives and barbiturates among 12th-graders since 2001. Nearly half of America’s 5.4 million full-time college students use drugs or drink alcohol on binges at least once a month, according to a March 2007 study by the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse (CASA) at Columbia University. Alcohol remains the favored substance of abuse on college campuses by far, but the abuse of illicit drugs, rose from 31% in 1993 to 37% in 2005.
- Cigarettes – The good news is that cigarette smoking among teens is down. But who has time to juggle a cigarette when you have to update your Facebook profile, shop online, play videogames, or use your iPod while IMing on your phone?
- Social Networking – A survey conducted by the Pew Internet & American Life Project in Fall 2006 found that 55% of teens ages 12 to 17 used social networking sites. The survey discovered that older girls are most likely to have used social networking sites, with 70% of teen girls, ages 15 to 17, maintaing profiles on social networking sites, compared with 57% of boys in that age bracket. More than one in four (27%) of all students surveyed are heavy users of social-networking sites and services, reports a Grunwald Associates social networking study. That same study found that 71% of online tweens and teens connect to a social network at least once a week.

Three in four teens and tweens own at least one console or portable gaming system and plan to buy 3.1 games in 2008, up from 2.5 last year. The videogaming world is becoming tightly meshed with teen reality, making pop-culture icons out of such as videogame stars as Nintendo’s Super Mario.
- E-commerce – Nearly six out of 10 U.S. teens surveyed have made a purchase online, according to a June 2008 study conducted by OTX and The Intelligence Group. Responding online buying teens said they spent an average of $46 every month. Total spending among 13-to-21-year-olds was estimated at $120 billion in 2007, according to Harris Interactive. Apparel can be an important focus for status-conscious teens. Some of the most popular apparel sites visited by MySpace users are American Eagle, Hot Topic and Hollister.
- Texting – Several studies suggest that heavy-texting teens are more prone to disrupted sleep, restlessness, stress and fatigue. Meanwhile, the report “Writing, Technology, and Teens” shows that 38% of high-school-age students have used abbreviations like ‘LOL’ in school assignments, notes Richard Sterling, professor at the University of California Berkeley and contributor to this report.
Is it any surprise that our future social dialog will be heavily influenced by text messaging? David Crystal, a University of Wales language historian, believes that the written language will resemble text messages by 2020. “The Internet is fostering new kinds of creativity through language. It’s the beginning of a new stage in the evolution of the written language,” says Crystal. Leave it to our tech-savvy offspring to take us there first.
Ubertrends: Time Compression, Digital Lifestyle, Unwired
Value Propellants: Multi-Functional, Speed, Convergence, Connectedness, Freedom
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