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Hispanics on the web They've been slower to go online but they're catching up Mar 24, 2009 The percentage of Hispanics with online access trails the national average generally, with only 54 percent online, compared to nearly 70 percent of the total U.S. population. But while they may be lagging in online access, they’re way ahead of the rest of the online population when it comes to downloading everything from music to video, according to a new report from Scarborough Research. Media people hoping to reach this group would be smart to check out major downloading sites like iTunes and Amazon, as Hispanic users are 21 percent more likely to download digital content than the average adult user. Forty-two percent of Hispanic users have downloaded some form of digital content over the past month, compared to 35 percent of the general internet population. Music leads with nearly a third of Hispanic users downloading music the past month, compared with a quarter of the internet population generally. This also highlights the rapid increase in broadband connections for Hispanics, which have grown from 13 percent in 2002 to 68 percent this year. Overall Hispanics’ internet access has grown 13 percent since 2004, compared to an 8 percent growth rate for the web generally. Gary A. Meo, senior vice president of print and internet sales at Scarborough, talks to Media Life about where to target online Hispanics, what types of downloads are most popular, and why certain markets have a denser online Hispanic population.
What's the most important thing media buyers and planners can take from it?
Why are Hispanic internet users such heavy digital content downloaders?
What type of content are they likely to download and why?
How have marketers specially targeted Hispanics with broadband access to establish brand loyalty with this group? But you can see how serious marketers are about targeting Hispanics online when you consider that the leading internet brands – Google, Yahoo, Amazon, etc. – all have Spanish-language options on their sites.
How much more room for growth is there in the Hispanic web market generally? That is, will we keep seeing them go online at a faster pace than the population at large?
Is there much difference between online user rates for primarily English- and primarily Spanish-speaking Hispanics?
What differences demographically do you see between markets where Hispanics are likely to have a broadband connection (Miami) and those where they are not (El Paso, Dallas, etc.)? Those markets that have lower broadband penetration tend to have younger Hispanic adults who are not as established in the U.S. yet.
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