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Online Social Networking Grows Up: Move Over Kids, The Boomers Are Coming
Online Social Networking Grows Up: Move Over Kids, The Boomers Are Coming
Online Social Networking Grows Up: Move Over Kids, The Boomers Are Coming
(ARA) - At
age 59, Dell Housewright is the future of online social
networking.
Social networking -- connecting with people and forming communities
using Web sites and online tools -- used to be only for the young
who meet new friends at sites like MySpace and Facebook. But the
massive adoption of the Internet by boomers is changing this scene.
Today, a number of social networking sites targeted toward this
more mature crowd are cropping up, including Gather, which fosters
thoughtful conversations and debate, and sites like 55-Alive and
Eons, both of which were created specifically for 50-plus social
networking. These sites are arming their users with traditional
social networking tools such as profiles, which let users express
their personal interests and connect with others of like minds;
blogs, where "conversations" happen through posting comments and
photos; and groups, which bring just a few, or thousands of people,
together around a passion or interest.
"Eons is a supporting place where people can come together," says
Housewright, an author and seminar consultant who created his own
blog and joined several groups at eons.com. "If you find you like
the people in a group, you stay and you talk. If you don't find a
group that's talking about what you want to talk about, you start
your own group."
More than 300,000 boomers are participating in nearly 2,000
discussion communities hosted at Eons. Topics range from "50+
Singles" -- one of the most popular on the site and one where
Housewright regularly converses with friends -- to the playful and
irreverent "Hippies for Life," which is dedicated to "music,
friends and peace," according to its organizers. And new groups are
being created by users each day.
Eons' popularity reflects how boomers' quest to continue exploring
life and making new connections that enrich their life is fueling
the social networking world. With more than 44 million Americans
age 50 to 64 online, social networking among this group is poised
for growth.
And the lines separating the real and virtual worlds are rapidly
blurring. Housewright is an example of those who are transforming
social networking from a strictly online conversation to
relationships that extend into the real world -- even romance for
some single boomers.
After a casual suggestion in a discussion group with some of his
online friends that the group should try to set up a meeting,
Housewright and others began to exchange ideas. Travel was an
interest they shared, so the concept took shape of organizing a
singles cruise where some of them could get to know each other
better.
"I thought that if we had five or six people who wanted to go, that
would be good," says Housewright, whose book, "A Boomer's Tour of
the Dating World," will be published later this year. "As it turned
out, dozens of people from all over the country signed up." And the
number will most likely grow by the time the ship pushes off from
its Florida port for a five-day Caribbean cruise this summer.
Eons CEO Jeff Taylor, the Internet maverick who founded career site
Monster.com in the mid-1990s, says he founded his new company last
year with the goal of creating a social networking site that is the
center of gravity for everything 50-plus.
"Boomers want in," Taylor says. "They're ready to play, and they
want to be with like-minded people where they can bring all their
life experiences and knowledge to bear. Eons is squarely in the
middle of that conversation, creating tools that make connecting
with new friends easier. When we see Dell and his group taking that
leap from the online world into reality, it helps assure us that we
are providing a fertile ground for those loving life on the
flipside of 50."
Courtesy of ARAcontent
