Dictionary Definition
demographic adj : of or relating to demography;
"demographic surveys" n : a statistic characterizing human
populations (or segments of human populations broken down by age or
sex or income etc.)
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From sc=Grek and sc=Grek.Adjective
- Of or pertaining to demography.
Translations
Of or pertaining to demography
- Finnish: demografinen, väestötieteellinen
- French: démographique
- Hebrew: דמוגראפי (demografi)
- Ido: demografia
Noun
- A demographic criterion: a characteristic used to
classify people for statistical purposes, such as
age, race, or gender.
- 1985, Richard I. Henderson, Compensation Management: Rewarding
Performance, Fourth Edition,http://books.google.com/books?id=3AVHAAAAMAAJ
Reston Pub. Co., ISBN 0835909743, page 604,
- Of significant current interest is the fact that the compa-ratio can be used to analyze the pay treatment of specific groups of employees. Segregating employees by such demographics as gender, race, or age group (e.g., 18–25, 26–39, 40–50, 51–65), a compa-ratio analysis could provide a first indication […]
- 2000, James Chapman, “Impact of Building Roads to Everywhere”,
in Robert D. Bullard, Glenn S. Johnson, and Angel O. Torres (eds.),
Sprawl City: Race, Politics, and Planning in Atlanta,http://books.google.com/books?id=Arg-DU8tQF8C
Island Press, ISBN 1-55963-790-0, page 82,
- How will this investment affect at the individual level, based on being disaggregated by various demographics (race and ethnicity, gender, age, disability, income) and locations (inner city, inner ring suburbs, suburbs, exurbs), miles traveled, travel time, accessibility to transit, and car ownership?
- 1985, Richard I. Henderson, Compensation Management: Rewarding
Performance, Fourth Edition,http://books.google.com/books?id=3AVHAAAAMAAJ
Reston Pub. Co., ISBN 0835909743, page 604,
- A demographic group: a
collection of people sharing a value for a certain demographic
criterion.
- 2002, Laura Grindstaff, ‘Pretty Woman with a Gun: La Femme
Nikita and the Textual Politics of “The Remake”’, in Jennifer
Forrest and Leonard R. Koos (eds.), Dead Ringers: The Remake in
Theory and Practice,http://books.google.com/books?id=R1CRyD4Bs44C
State University of New York Press, ISBN 0-7914-5169-0, page 281,
- […] it was also the initial verdict for the Nikita television series before the show garnered something of a cult following among the crucial 30–something demographic, at which point the critical response grew decidedly more favorable.
- 2006, Tom Hutchison, Amy Macy, Paul Allen, Record Label
Marketing, Elsevier, page 189,
- A newspaper is consumed by many demographics, a small portion of which may be the target.
- 2006, Kelley Keehn, The Woman's Guide to Money,http://books.google.com/books?id=cgRSZWh0BdkC
Insomniac Press, ISBN 1897178085, page 44,
- As a member of the Generation X demographic, I'm saddened to admit that paying with plastic (whether debit or credit card) has superseded paying with real money.
- 2002, Laura Grindstaff, ‘Pretty Woman with a Gun: La Femme
Nikita and the Textual Politics of “The Remake”’, in Jennifer
Forrest and Leonard R. Koos (eds.), Dead Ringers: The Remake in
Theory and Practice,http://books.google.com/books?id=R1CRyD4Bs44C
State University of New York Press, ISBN 0-7914-5169-0, page 281,
- An individual person's characteristic, encoded for the purposes of statistical analysis.
Translations
A statistic grouping people by their
characteristics
- Finnish: väestötiede, demografia
An individual person's characteristic, encoded
for the purposes of statistical analysis
Extensive Definition
Demographics or demographic data refers to
selected population characteristics as used in government, marketing or opinion research,
or the demographic
profiles used in such research. Note the distinction from the
term "demography"
(see below.) Commonly-used demographics include race, age, income,
disabilities, mobility (in terms of travel time to work or number
of vehicles available), educational attainment, home ownership,
employment status, and even location. Distributions of values
within a demographic variable, and across households, are both of
interest, as well as trends over time. Demographics are frequently
used in economic and
marketing
research.
Demographic trends describe the changes in
demographics in a population over time. For example, the average
age of a population may increase. It may decrease as well as
certain restrictions may be in place, for instance like in China if
the population is high.
The term demographics as a noun is often used
erroneously in place of demography, the study of
human population, its
structure and change. Although there is no absolute delineation,
demography focuses on population structure, processes and dynamics,
whereas demographics is most often used in the fields of media
studies, advertising, marketing, and polling, and should not be
used interchangeably with the term "demography" or (more broadly)
"population studies".
Demographic variables
Demographic Marketers and other social profilers often group populations into categories based on demographic variables. Some frequently used demographic variables are:Demographic profiles in marketing
Marketers typically combine several variables to
define a demographic
profile. A demographic profile (often shortened to "a
demographic") provides enough information about the typical member
of this group to create a mental picture of this hypothetical
aggregate. For example, a marketer might speak of the single,
female, middle-class,
age 18 to 24 demographic.
Marketing researchers typically have two
objectives in this regard: first to determine what segments or
subgroups exist in the overall population; and secondly to create a
clear and complete picture of the characteristics of a typical
member of each of these segments. Once these profiles are
constructed, they can be used to develop a marketing
strategy and marketing
plan.
Generational cohorts
A generational cohort has been defined as "the aggregation of individuals (within some population definition) who experience the same event within the same time interval". The notion of a group of people bound together by the sharing of the experience of common historical events due to their birth in a particular period of time was first introduced by Karl Mannheim in the early 1920s. Today the concept has found its way into popular culture through well known epitomes like "baby boomer" and "gen-Xer".Cohorts in the United States
A study by William Strauss and Neil Howe, in their books Generations and Fourth Turning, looked at generational similarities and differences going back to the 15th century and concluded that over 80 year spans, generations proceed through 4 stages of about 20 years each. The first phase consists of times of relative crisis and the people born during this period were called "artists". The next phase was a "high" period and those born in this period were called "prophets". The next phase was an "awakening period" and people born in this period were called "nomads". The final stage was the "unraveling period" and people born in this period were called "heroes". The most recent "high period" occurred in the 50s and 60s (hence baby boomers are the most recent crop of "prophets").The most definitive recent study of US
generational cohorts was done by Schuman and Scott (1989) in 1985
in which a broad sample of adults of all ages were asked, "What
world events over the past 50 years were especially important to
them?" They found that 33 events were mentioned with great
frequency. When the ages of the respondents were correlated with
the expressed importance rankings, seven distinct cohorts became
evident. Today the following descriptors are frequently used for
these cohorts:
- Depression cohort (born from 1912 to 1921)
- Memorable events: The Great Depression, high levels of unemployment, poverty, lack of creature comforts, financial uncertainty
- Key characteristics: strive for financial security, risk averse, waste-not-want-not attitude, strive for comfort
- Pre 'World War
II cohort (born from 1922 to 1927)
- Memorable events: men leaving to go to war and many not returning, the personal experience of the war, women working in factories, focus on defeating a common enemy
- Key characteristics: the nobility of sacrifice for the common good, patriotism, team player
- World War
II cohort (born from 1928 to 1945)
- Memorable events: sustained economic growth, social tranquility, The Cold War, McCarthyism
- Key characteristics: conformity, conservatism, traditional family values
- Baby
Boomer cohort #1 (born from 1946 to 1954)
- Memorable events: assassinations of JFK, Robert Kennedy, and Martin Luther King, political unrest, walk on the moon, Vietnam War, anti-war protests, social experimentation, sexual freedom, civil rights movement, environmental movement, women's movement, protests and riots, experimentation with various intoxicating recreational substances
- Key characteristics: experimental, individualism, free spirited, social cause oriented
- Baby Boomer cohort #2 (born from 1955 to 1964)
- Generation X
cohort (born from 1965 to 1979)
- Memorable events: Challenger explosion, Iran-Contra, social malaise, Reaganomics, AIDS, safe sex, single parent families
- Key characteristics: quest for emotional security, independent, informality, entrepreneurial
- Generation Y
cohort also called N Generation (born from 1980 to 2001)
- Memorable events: rise of the internet, September 11 attacks, cultural diversity, 2 wars in Iraq
- Key characteristics: quest for physical security and safety, patriotism, heightened fears, acceptance of change, technically savvy, environmental issues
U.S. Demographic birth cohorts
The US Census Bureau generally considers the following demographic birth cohorts based on birth rate, which is statistically measurable:- Classics (born from 1900 to 1920)
- (the last American cohort in which the population pyramid takes on the standard "step" form for males and females)
- Baby Bust (I) (born from 1921 to 1945)
- early cohort (born from 1921 to 1933)
- late cohort (born from 1934 to 1945)
- Baby Boomers (born from 1946 to 1964)
- Leading Edge Boomers (born from 1946 to 1957)
- Trailing Edge Boomers (born from 1958 to 1964)
- Baby Bust (II) (born from 1965 to 1976)
- Echo Boomers (born from 1977 to 1994)
- Leading Edge (born from 1977 to 1990)
- Trailing Edge (born from 1991 to 1994)
Subdivided groups are present when peak boom
years or inverted peak bust years are present, and may be
represented by a normal
or
inverted bell-shaped curve (rather than a straight curve). The
boom subdivided cohorts may be considered as "pre-peak" (including
peak year) and "post-peak". The year 1957 was the baby boom peak
with 4.3 million births and 122.7 fertility rate. Although
post-peak births (such as trailing edge boomers) are in decline,
and sometimes referred to as a "bust", there are still a relative
large number of births. The dearth-in-birth bust cohorts include
those up to the valley birth year, and those including and beyond,
leading up to the subsequent normal birth rate. From the decline in
birth rates starting in 1958 and the introduction of the birth
control pill in 1960, the Baby Boomer normal distribution curve is
negatively
skewed. The trend in birth rates from 1958 to 1961 show a
tendency to end late in the decade at approximately 1969, thus
returning to pre-WWII levels, with 12 years of rising and 12 years
of declining birth rates. Pre-war birth rates were defined as
anywhere between 1939 and 1941 by demographers such as the
Taeuber's, Philip M. Hauser and William
Fielding Ogburn.
http://books.google.com/books?id=CjgLHG82ZXUC&pg=PA25&dq=%22daddy%27s+gone+to+war%22+Taeubers+Philip+Hauser+William&ei=Unt-R4evAYLusgOe06jFBA&sig=tclt1S4wCOF5gtXqb_AXEVSwA-M#PPA25,M1
From 1962 to 1964, trend analysis points to 1965 as being the first
year to return to baseline birth rates, possibly referring to this
cohort as "Generation X".
Criticisms and qualifications of demographic profiling
Demographic profiling is essentially an exercise
in making generalizations about groups of people. As with all such
generalizations many individuals within these groups will not
conform to the profile - demographic information is aggregate and
probabilistic information about groups, not about specific
individuals. Critics of demographic profiling argue that such
broad-brush generalizations can only offer such limited insight
that their practical usefulness is debatable. However, if the
conclusions drawn are statistically valid and reproduceable, these
criticisms are not as well founded.
Most demographic information is also culturally
based. The generational cohort information above, for example,
applies primarily to North America (and to a lesser extent to
Western Europe) and it may be unfruitful to generalise conclusions
more widely.
See also
- Marketing
- Economics
- List of marketing topics
- Consumer behaviour
- Marketing research
- Demographics of Europe
- Market segment
- Workforce Planning
- Social surveys: General Social Survey, ALLBUS, GSOEP, PSID, European Social Survey, [[World Values Survey]
References
- Klauke, A. (2000) Coping with Changing Demographics An analysis of the effect of changing demographic patterns on school enrollments and education.
- Meredith, G., Schewe, C., and Haim, A. (2002), Managing by defining moments: Innovative strategies for motivating 5 very different generational cohorts, Hungry Minds Inc., New York, 2002, ISBN 0-7645-5412-3
External links
demographic in Spanish: Demografía
demographic in Swedish: Demografi
demographic in Chinese: 人口統計學