Thursday, December 29, 2005

Behind the Curve, Again

Five years ago, a global evangelical ministry asked a group of youth workers how to become relevant to young people. We suggested leveraging the power of the internet to create a "virtual youth center" where kids could share interests and ideas, find their voice, and connect. Several months later they commissioned a creative brief unpacking the idea. We called it "MyLife.com." The brief was scheduled to go before the ministry's Board in September 2001, but 9/11 derailed it. Subsequent management and program changes kept the idea shelved.

Fast forward five years, and the cover of Business Week heralds "The MySpace Generation" (12/12/05):
"Preeminent among these virtual hangouts is MySpace.com, whose membership has nearly quadrupled since January alone, to 40 million members. Youngsters log on so obsessively that MySpace ranked No. 15 on the entire U.S. Internet in terms of page hits in October, according to Nielsen//NetRatings. Millions also hang out at other up-and-coming networks such as Facebook.com, which connects college students, and Xanga.com, an agglomeration of shared blogs. A second tier of some 300 smaller sites, such as Buzz-Oven, Classface.com, and Photobucket.com, operate under -- and often inside or next to -- the larger ones.

"Although networks are still in their infancy, experts think they're already creating new forms of social behavior that blur the distinctions between online and real-world interactions. In fact, today's young generation largely ignores the difference. Most adults see the Web as a supplement to their daily lives. They tap into information, buy books or send flowers, exchange apartments, or link up with others who share passions for dogs, say, or opera. But for the most part, their social lives remain rooted in the traditional phone call and face-to-face interaction.

"The MySpace generation, by contrast, lives comfortably in both worlds at once. Increasingly, America's middle- and upper-class youth use social networks as virtual community centers, a place to go and sit for a while (sometimes hours). While older folks come and go for a task, Adams and her social circle are just as likely to socialize online as off. This is partly a function of how much more comfortable young people are on the Web: Fully 87% of 12- to 17-year-olds use the Internet, vs. two-thirds of adults, according to the Pew Internet & American Life Project.

"Teens also use many forms of media simultaneously. Fifteen- to eighteen-year-olds average nearly 6 1/2 hours a day watching TV, playing video games, and surfing the Net, according to a recent Kaiser Family Foundation survey. A quarter of that time, they're multitasking. The biggest increase: computer use for activities such as social networking, which has soared nearly threefold since 2000, to 1 hour and 22 minutes a day on average." Article.
Is it petty and childish to say, "ARGH"?

How can we engage kids in this space that 40 MILLION (and growing) finding so fascinating?

1 Comments:

Anonymous Anonymous said...

It's frustrating that we lost out on a chance to have offered something so vast, powerful and engaging to the youth of America. However I've become more frustrated with the fact that so few of our youth pastors and youth leaders are using MySpace effectively to connect with their own youth, let alone others in their area.

MySpace.com is undoubtedly filled with darkness, and a simple surveying through some of its members shows a vast seedy / sometimes bordering on pornographic tendency. However, there are kids in pain, and confused making mistakes and poor life choices and chances are... they aren't going to walk into our youth groups on their own and say: "Hey, I've got a problem and I need your help!".

We must infiltrate this area and begin to turn the tide! Not only should we do this, we should train our best and brightest youth to do the same and work in teams to reach out to their peers in networks like this. I do believe it's too much temptation for a single youth to make it work. Yet, a team committed to watching out for each other and making a difference online for the kingdom of God will be very effective!

Let's engage them were they are! Even if that's online.

7:37 PM  

Post a Comment

<< Home