Digital Immigrants are intuitively linear, they want to see a beginning, middle, and end to stories.
For DIgital Natives, stories still need a beginning, middle and end, but they will accept it in any order. Digital Natives are subconsciously switching between platforms and can pick up different pieces of a story from different mediums in any order.
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According to a new study from Time Inc. titled “A Biometric Day in the Life” shows how the proliferation of digital devices and platforms would affect the media consumption habits of consumers who grew up with mobile technology as part of their everyday lives (“Digital Natives,”) versus those who first learned about mobile technology in their adult lives (“Digital Immigrants”). Digital Natives switch their attention between media platforms (i.e. TVs, magazines, tablets, smartphones or channels within platforms) 27 times per hour, about every other minute!
Because Digital Natives spend more time using multiple media platforms simultaneously, their emotional engagement with content is constrained. They experience fewer highs and lows of emotional response and as a result. Digital Natives more frequently use media to regulate their mood; as soon as they grow tired or bored, they turn their attention to something new.
At home, Digital Natives take their devices from room to room with them (65% vs. 41% for Digital Immigrants), rarely more than an arm’s length away from their smartphones making switching platforms even easier.
54% of Digital Natives say “I prefer texting people rather than talking to them” compared with 28% of Digital immigrants, a significant indicator of how marketers and content creators need to communicate with them, says the report.
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Betsy Frank, Chief Research & Insights Officer for Time Inc., concludes “… to keep Digital Natives engaged, content creators and marketers need to think differently… grabbing them… is essential, as is content they can snack on… offering multiple access points to every story.”
Basic integrated digital/social storytellling. Or, at least, seems ‘basic’ but perhaps still not universal. / Prolly a bit simplistic to draw that harsh terminator line between the two. http://bit.ly/KNO3at
HT to Wildcat2030