Facebook monopolises NZ's online social networking landscape

09 Dec, 2011
 
Facebook monopolises NZ's online social networking landscape
Professor Allan Bell, Director of AUT's Institute for Culture, Discourse & Communication

Facebook has captured the hearts (and time) of Kiwis while MySpace has disappeared off our radars completely.

In 2009, 74 per cent of those with a membership to a social networking site said they used Facebook the most often. This figure has jumped to 96 per cent in 2011, the latest World Internet Project New Zealand survey has discovered.

With 'Facebook' being the second most searched item on Google New Zealand in 2011*, it is no wonder New Zealanders are using it more than ever before.

The third bi-annual World Internet Project (WIP) New Zealand survey of more than 1200 New Zealanders has found that overall levels of Internet use continue to increase. Eighty six per cent of New Zealanders are now online, up from 79 per cent in 2007 and 83 per cent in 2009.


Results in the survey

Director of AUT’s Institute of Culture, Discourse and Communication and WIP director Professor Allan Bell says that the growth in broadband is another striking change between 2007 and 2011.

“91 per cent of users now have a broadband connection at home. The trajectory from 67 per cent in 2007 to 84 per cent in 2009 has continued but is now easing as we approach saturation. We are finally bringing New Zealand close to other comparable countries on an important measure where it once lagged.”

The survey findings have also shown an increased popularity in the use of smartphones and other handheld wireless devices with usage having risen from 7 per cent in 2007 to 27 per cent of Internet users in 2011.

The influence of wireless networking has also contributed to a change in where the Internet is used in the home, with 54 per cent of users now accessing the Internet mostly from communal areas of their home, up from 36 per cent in 2007.

“These changes illustrate the increasing embeddedness of the Internet in everyday home life. More and more New Zealanders (58 per cent) also affirm the overall importance of the Internet to their daily lives,” says Professor Bell.

Of those still not using the Internet, reasons vary from not finding it interesting to not feeling confident using the technology.  A surprisingly small number of respondents say financial constraints are their main reason.

All about the report

With three surveys completed, Professor Bell says the reports are now more than ever able to map Internet use in New Zealand and identify trends that can be used to inform government and business decision-making.

New Zealand is one of 30 countries involved in the World Internet Project – a longitudinal study that enables comparisons of Internet use across countries. AUT University, with funding from the National Library of New Zealand and from Internet NZ, conducted its first survey in 2007, the second in 2009 and the most recent in 2011.