Media execs rocked by 15-year-old's blunt, blistering analysis

Tue Jul 14, 2009 3:57PM EDT

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Teens don't use Twitter, nor do they read newspapers. They also hate advertisements, and they're really, really into free music.

Nope, those aren't the results of some bone-headed new survey; instead, they come straight from the keyboard of one Matthew Robson, a 15-year-old Morgan Stanley intern whose candid report on his friends' TV, music, and online habits set the media world on fire this week.

According to The Guardian, Robson's bosses at Morgan Stanley's European Media group were so impressed with the teen's report—"one of the clearest and most thought-provoking insights we have seen," one Morgan Stanley exec said—that they promptly sent it out to their C-level clients.

The response, apparently, was immediate, with "dozens and dozens" of high-level clients "e-mailing and calling all day," the Guardian reports.

As for Robson's report, well … the kid didn't mince words. "Teenagers do not use Twitter" (as quoted by the Guardian). Why? Because updating Twitter on your phone counts as a text message, and teens would rather use their texts to ping friends than update a Twitter profile "that no one is viewing," Robson writes.

He goes on, dissing newspapers because teens "cannot be bothered" to read physical pages when they can get the condensed version online or on the tube. As for banner ads on the Web? "Extremely annoying and pointless," Robson observes (according to the Guardian). By the same token, Robson says teenagers are "very reluctant" to pony up for tunes, preferring to stream or share them for free.

Of course, Robson is only speaking for himself (and his friends, I'm assuming). Still, I think it's great that he took his assignment at Morgan Stanley seriously, writing a direct, honest report that (apparently) hit media bigwigs in the solar plexus.

And so I challenge you, my teen readers (or those of you older than 13, anyway) to do what Robson did: write up a clear, concise, honest report on what you and your friends are watching, listening to, texting, and tweeting (or not, as the case may be). Post em' below (please be sure to include your first name, age, and your home town), and I'll include the best excerpts in a future post. Go ahead and let us have it, straight—the floor is yours.

Update: Check out some of your (excellent) responses right here.

Related:
Twitter is not for teens, Morgan Stanley told by 15-year-old expert [The Guardian]

Comments on Media execs rocked by 15-year-old's blunt, blistering analysis

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  • 1 Posted by prabhjot_1992 on Tue Jul 14, 2009 7:21PM EDT Report Abuse

    so now i have to "write" something for yahoo tech? not gonna happen. teens hate useless writing.

  • 2 Posted by janettwokay on Tue Jul 14, 2009 8:36PM EDT Report Abuse

    It's pathetic that an adult in the corporate world didn't already know this stuff. They don't need to query a child for it, they simply need to observe them. I don't consider anything mentioned in the article to be ground-breaking. *yawn*

  • 3 Posted by skywriter2k on Wed Jul 15, 2009 7:56AM EDT Report Abuse

    Blistering analysis? pointing out the obvious would be more accurate. I'm on the high side of 40 and this is no shock to me.

  • 4 Posted by iamcaressa on Wed Jul 15, 2009 10:03AM EDT Report Abuse

    I'm pretty sure you meant "though-provoking," not "through-provoking." Just a side note.

  • 5 Posted by guitarmunkey05 on Wed Jul 15, 2009 10:56AM EDT Report Abuse

    I'm 22 and all of these still apply to me and everyone i know (who is the same age)

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