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September 10, 2008 5:43 PM PDT

Mobile carriers see opportunity in 'tween' market

by Marguerite Reardon

SAN FRANCISCO--Nearly half of kids age 8 to 12 years old own cell phones in the U.S., in what could be the next big cell phone demographic for the mobile industry, according to a Nielsen report released here Wednesday at the CTIA Fall 2008 trade show.

Nielsen says that 46 percent of the 20 million young consumers known as "tweens" are using mobile phones. On average kids get their first cell phone between the ages of 10 and 11 years old. About 55 percent of tweens, who own cell phones, send text messages and 21 percent download ringtones.

The main reason these kids have phones is because their parents want them to have them in case of an emergency or problem. But about 92 percent of those surveyed said they restrict how tweens use their phones, with 69 percent of them prohibiting the download of games and ringtones, which typically incur charges. Roughly 65 percent of tweens with phones get cell phone service through family plans.

As cell penetration approaches 85 percent in the U.S., cell phone operators are looking toward younger consumers to drive growth. And operators are focusing more effort in figuring out what is needed from this often difficult to survey group of consumers.

"Tweens have grown up with mobile phones and expect them to do much more than make a call," Richard Wood, a vice president for Nielsen Mobile said in a statement. "Our clients want to understand tweens' attitudes and mobile behavior in the context of their daily life and media consumption."

But tweens aren't the only young demographic that the mobile industry is interested in targeting. On Friday the CTIA will feature a session at its fall trade show here that will provide results of a national survey of thousands of American teenagers. It will also provide a live panel of 13- to 19-year-olds, who will discuss how they use wireless. So stay tuned for more on those results later this week.

Marguerite Reardon has been a CNET News reporter since 2004, covering cell phone services, broadband, citywide Wi-Fi, the Net neutrality debate, as well as the ongoing consolidation of the phone companies. E-mail Maggie.
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by Shutterstuff September 10, 2008 7:48 PM PDT
Until the phone companies give me better parental control, my kids will go without. I want to be able to log into a web site and see ALL activity. I want to be able to restrict hours of use. I also want to control how many minutes they are allowed each month. And if they are on restriction, I want to shut it off except for chosen home and work numbers.

Sprint, are you listening? Disney had most of this on your network before they pulled the plug...
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by slacker15 September 11, 2008 10:45 AM PDT
Check out t-mobile and their family allowance program. For $2 a month, you can do all of that, and you can even pick 10 numbers that your kids cannot call or recieve a call from. Minute and text allocation are are up to the account holder (you), and you can check where their calls are going and comming from.
by hornist4 September 28, 2008 9:06 AM PDT
It's not only Sprint. All cell phone comapnies realize that they can make mucho dinero from our tweens ans teens that simply do not know how much they are being charged. Much of it can be stopped by the parent by showing their children the phone bill and deducting the charges from their allowance. My phone has text messaging blocked. You may try this yourself. It works!
by hornist4 September 28, 2008 8:58 AM PDT
I guess with all the text messaging, we will some day become a speechless society. We are also teaching, or un-teaching our youth how to spell. Kids in school today turn in their english assignments using 2 for to, u for you, and other short forms of what otherwise would be deemed correct english. If someone turned in a resume to me with the bastardized forms, the resumes go directly into the trash, but not before I write a letter to the applicant explaining why. I work with the public and cannot afford employees who appear uneducated to my older clients.
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