New trends emerge in mobile devices, social media

LinkedIn is up, Facebook is falling and BlackBerry is hanging on in new report.

Federal decision-makers are nearly twice as likely to use LinkedIn as was the case a year ago, and the majority are accessing other social websites and using mobile devices as well, according to a new survey.


Thirty-five percent of the federal executives surveyed by Market Connections Inc. research firm in Chantilly, Va. said they use LinkedIn for personal and professional reasons, up from 18 percent a year ago.

“LinkedIn is beginning to take off as a key destination for federal decision makers,” Market Connections said in a news release announcing the study results on April 12.

The company performed interviews with 3,700 federal employees referred to as “decision makers,” of whom a significant number were managers and the majority were aged 45 or older.

Facebook and YouTube were the most popular social destinations reported by the respondents. Fifty-eight percent said they used Facebook, and 46 percent used YouTube, either personally or professionally.

Facebook use was “leveling off,” experiencing only a very small bump since last year, while YouTube usage was up by 12 percentage points, said Lisa Dezzutti, president of Market Connections.

Furthermore, professional use of Facebook was dwindling. Among those surveyed, only 3 percent were using Facebook for work-related reasons, down from 6 percent a year ago.

In other results:

  • 13 percent use wikis;
  • 11 percent use Twitter;
  • 6 percent use Flickr;
  • 4 percent use GovLoop;
  • 4 percent use General Services Administration Interact.


Regarding mobile devices, the survey found that more than half of the federal decision makers, 58 percent, use smart phones and almost a third, 31 percent, use tablet computers.

For work email, Blackberry was dominant, with 30 percent of the respondents using the device for that purpose. For personal email, iPhones and Androids were most common, with 36 percent reporting usage on either of those two devices for that purpose.

Following email, the next most popular use for the mobile devices was accessing newspaper websites, with 27 percent of iPhones and Androids and 21 percent of tablets used for that purpose.

The third-ranked use differed between smart phones and tablets. For iPhones and Androids, accessing social media, reported by 24 percent, ranked third. On tablets, video was the third most popular use, with 20 percent reporting it.

The survey also indicated that print media, trade shows and conferences still are preferred channels for many of the federal decision makers. 

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