This information isn't particularly surprising, given the fact that people in this age bracket grew up during the blog boom -- which started roughly seven years ago, according to Sysmos -- but it does show an interesting striation in terms of where people are on the web.
The report culled more than 120 million blog posts for information. According to a rep, "The demographics -- including age, gender, location -- are based on self-disclosed information. For example, if someone mentions I live in Queens, or Brooklyn, or Manhattan, we put that person as living in New York."
Using this method, the company deduced that 53.3% of the total blogging population is 21-35 years old. Bloggers aged 20 and under came in second, with 20.2%, followed by 36-50-year-olds (at 19.4%), and 51-year-olds and older (7.1%).
These numbers go hand-in-hand with previous studies we've seen -- past research has indicated that Twitter is beloved by teens (which makes sense considering that it's a newer platform) and older folks are finding their way to Facebook, so much so that mothers have become a target audience for ads (with 400 million accounts, Facebook has a pretty diverse user base).
Interestingly, Sysmos also found that the gender distribution is nearly even among bloggers -- with women making up 50.9% of keyboard jockeys and men 49.1%. We're happy to see such equality reflected in the blogosphere (Sysmos, however, had no data with regard to race).
Other notable stats include:
29.2% of bloggers are located in the U.S. -- that's four times as many as the the UK, which comes in second with 6.75%.
California has the most bloggers (14.1%), and New York comes in number two with 7.1%.
While more than half of the tweets in the world come from the U.S., only a third of blog posts originate there.
What do you think of these findings? Does anything surprise you?
[img credit: Mike Licht, NotionsCapital.com]