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MetaFacts TUP/Technology User Profile analysis results for subscribers

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Category: User Profile

Posted on February 1, 2024May 20, 2024

IT, FIRE, and professional industry employees sustain the highest remote working rates

Even before the pandemic, working remotely has been a mixed blessing for IT staff. While many employees in the information technology industry are able to work remotely and support geographically dispersed organizations, many have historically needed to work well beyond the confines of a 40-hour workweek or 9 to 5 schedule. Similarly, many workers in real estate and other professions have experienced the benefits that come with pitfalls. With the onset of the pandemic, the gap has become clearer between employees in these industries and the average worker.

This MetaFAQs reports on the percentage of employees in the IT/FIRE/Professional industries who work remotely at least some of the time, and contrasts their share with the national averages in the US, Germany, UK, Japan, and China. Report [TUP_doc_2024_0201_firt] in TUP Lenses: User Profile; Work/Life Balance

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Posted on January 31, 2024February 29, 2024

Home printer age by generation

Earlier generations are using older printers than later generations. This is not completely due to the more recent household formation of Gen Z and millennial Americans, and instead is reflecting the inertia of earlier generations in home printer purchases and repurchases.

This MetaFAQs reports on the age of home printers being used by American adults, split by detailed generational age groups, including Gen Z adults, younger and older millennials, Gen X, and Boomer Americans, as well as the Silent+Greatest generations. Report [TUP_doc_2024_0131_prag] in TUP Lenses: Printers; User Profile

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Posted on January 31, 2024March 14, 2024

Remote work pays: cross-country earnings compared

Remote workers tend to earn more than their workplace-going counterparts. Various factors, including educational attainment, socioeconomic status, and job type, influence this. We found this positive association in the US, UK, Germany, Japan, and China.

This MetaFAQs focuses on quantifying the income disparity, rather than determining the causal relationship between income levels and remote work. Report [TUP_doc_2024_0131_affl] in TUP Lenses: User Profile; Work/Life Balance

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Posted on January 30, 2024September 25, 2024

Game console usage sags among each generation; not game over among Gen Z

Game consoles have been a fixture among a sizable portion of adults for decades, although each earlier generation continues to lose interest. Since 2018, fewer adults in later generations have actively used a game console with each passing year.

This MetaFAQs reports on the multi-year change in the percentage of online adults in the US, Germany, the UK, Japan, and China who actively use a game console, split by age generation. Report [TUP_doc_2024_0130_cont] in TUP Lenses: User Profile; Activities; Game Consoles, Gaming PCs, and Game-Playing; Home Entertainment

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Posted on January 30, 2024March 19, 2024

HP home printer share by generation

HP has long established its brand dominance among online Americans, especially for HP home printers. HP has more successfully captured earlier generations, such as Baby Boomers and the Silent+Greatest generations. However, among Gen Z adults, even among home printer users, HP has a much lower-than-average share.

This MetaFAQs reports on the percentage of online Americans who use any printer, any home printer, any HP printer, any HP home printer, or any HP work printer by detailed age generations. Report [TUP_doc_2024_0130_prhp] in TUP Lenses: Printers; User Profile

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Posted on January 29, 2024May 20, 2024

Remote worker dominance trends downwards slightly in many countries

Remote workers make up nearly half of online workers in the US, Germany, and the UK. In Japan, remote working rates are lower, and among China’s socioeconomically elite online workers, the rates are higher. Smaller employers generally have the highest percentage of workers working remotely, although the pattern is not significantly different among medium and large employers. Remote working rates in 2023 are slightly lower in 2023 than in 2022, although not substantially so.

This MetaFAQs reports on the number of online adults working remotely in the US, Germany, the UK, Japan, and China, split by the employer’s size. Report [TUP_doc_2024_0129_remt] in TUP Lenses: User Profile; Work/Life Balance

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Posted on January 29, 2024September 25, 2024

Home printer brand user profile

The American home printer market is not monolithic, and there are, instead, differences in who uses home printers and how they use them. Some brands have targeted or attracted certain demographic groups. HP home printers, in particular, are being used by a higher-than-average share of older Americans and retirees, a group less penetrated by Canon. Brother and Epson have a higher-than-average share of college graduates or post-graduate users. Canon and Epson are used more often than average for printing photos and documents from tablets and mobile phones.

This MetaFAQs reports on the demographic profile of American home printer users, highlighting the distinct characteristics of Brother, Canon, Epson, and HP home printer users based on their age, gender, life stage, employment status, and educational attainment. It also identifies the unique printing activities for each major home printer brand. Report [TUP_doc_2024_0129_prep] in TUP Lenses: Printers; Activities; User Profile

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Posted on January 28, 2024February 29, 2024

Glimmers of growth and replacement for US home printers

Hopes of growth for the American home printer market are resting in the inertia of the majority who are in a holding pattern. Just over half of American home printer users have a printer and are not planning to buy another in the next year. However, those in the market to buy a printer for the first time or replace an existing printer make up close to 10% of online Americans surveyed. This shows a slow but steady progression of printer use and purchase plans, despite the many who are holding onto their existing printers.

This MetaFAQs reports on the percentage of online adults actively using a home printer or who plan to purchase a home printer in the next 12 months. Growth and replacement plans are split by the active installed base of HP, Brother, Epson, and Canon home printer users. Report [TUP_doc_2024_0128_prre] in TUP Lenses: Printers; User Profile

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Posted on January 27, 2024December 5, 2023

Apple’s younger multi-product customers

Apple’s better customers, actively using two or more smartphones, tablets, or computers, are decidedly younger than the online population. This youthful skew is seen in every country surveyed.
Germany stands out for its more extreme bias towards younger adults. The long-entrenched Google Android smartphone majority has proven difficult for Apple to penetrate. Germans aged 18 to 24 appear to be challenging the status quo.
This MetaFAQs reports on the percentage of online adults in the US, UK, Germany, Japan, and China who are actively using two or more Apple OS devices (an Apple iPhone (iOS), an Apple iPad (iPadOS), or an Apple Mac (MacOS). Report [TUP_doc_2024_0127_2apl] in TUP Lenses: Devices; PCs; Mobile Phones; Tablets; User Profile; Technology Ecosystems

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Posted on January 26, 2024September 25, 2024

Productivity is increasingly lead by smartphones and younger adults

People use connected devices to be productive, actively engaging in a broad set of activities spread among their various devices. The use of smartphones for productivity is growing while the use of computers has flattened or is even in decline. Younger adults have embraced productivity activities, although Gen X and millennials use different types of devices to get things done.
This MetaFAQs reports on the number and percentage of online adults who regularly perform a set of productivity activities, from work file collaboration to appointment scheduling. These results are further split by mean age and generation and trended by age and device type for Americans from 2020 through 2023. Report [TUP_doc_2024_0126_prod] in TUP Lenses: Activities, Mobile Phones, PCs, User Profile, Devices, Communication

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TUP TOPICS

  • Activities
  • Age
  • Age Groups
  • Android
  • Apple
  • Boomers
  • Commercial
  • Communication
  • Computers
  • Connected devices
  • Devices
  • Ecosystems
  • Elders
  • Employees
  • Employment status
  • Generations
  • Gen X
  • Gen Z
  • Home PCs
  • iPad
  • iPhone
  • Life stage
  • Market penetration
  • Microsoft
  • Microsoft Windows
  • Millennials
  • Mobile phones
  • Operating systems
  • Pandemic
  • PC activities
  • PCs
  • Penetration
  • Printers
  • Remote workers
  • Remote working
  • Smartphone activities
  • Smartphones
  • Sociodemographics
  • Tablets
  • Technology Ecosystems
  • Trends
  • User Profile
  • Windows
  • Work-related activities
  • Work from home

RECENT METAFAQS, TUPDATES, AND HIGHLIGHTS

  • Skype call forwarding its active base
  • Number of printer users using refilled ink or toner by country and generation
  • Aging ASUS work computers due for a refresh
  • Lenovo work computer users-a stable if unexcited group
  • Apple work computer users at a crossroads
  • Dell’s moribund home computer base
  • iPhone user base – broader and still somehow different
  • Lenovo’s leading edge – in home computing
  • Brother home printer successes may lead to future challenges
  • Inertia and tradition defend Epson home printer installed base

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