Archive for July 23rd, 2007

How Do You Use Your Mobile Phone Address Book?

Address books and keeping them current and accessible has been a problem for a long time. With the electronic revolution the paper address books have gradually went out of fashion, replaced by stand-alone PDAs, spreadsheets, online contact management services  and yes, mobile phone lists. But do people usually use their phone lists as THE primary address book? What are the various ways by which people keep the lists current and share that data with other applications and people?

The question is answered in part by a recent report. In a recent post, Ajit Jaokar of Open Gardens blog recommended a study: Mobile Life 2006 which looks at the social impacts of mobile phones in Europe. There are some interesting behavior studies there - and I believe that we need similar work in our part of the world. Going back to the topic of this post, on page 10, there is some interesting data:  

“Most people only regularly contact 10 people or less on their phone list”.
Allied to the texting revolution is another: the phone list revolution, namely the ability to store many phone numbers in a mobile phone. This has effectively become the modern address book. Overall, 36% of mobile phone users store at least 50 numbers on their phones; but, again, that overall figure disguises the significance of the impact of mobile phone technology on the young. 64% of under 25 have more than 50 numbers stored on their phones – compared with just 12% of the over-60s. 7% of men aged 18-24 store more than 200 numbers on their phones – compared to just 1% of women.

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