Walking: Search & Demographic Trends (Part 1 of 2)
Posted on February 16th, 2010 in Uncategorized | 5 Comments »
Walking for exercise was the most popular activity in terms of number of participants and was in the top ten when it came to year over year growth on our list of top leisure activities. Given an aging population, and a tough economy, it’s not surprising that walking is a popular leisure activity. To provide some context, in 2008, there were 96.6 million people who participated in ‘walking’ compared to ‘golf’ which had 25.5 million participants. Also, the number of walkers in 2008 was 11% higher than it was in 2007 which saw 89.9 million participants.
This will be a two part series. In this post, I’m going to look at:
- Demographic & Gender Trends for Walking in the USA
- Footwear Spending by Category
- Walking Shoe Purchasers by Age & Gender
- Top Search Keywords
The second post will focus on stock photography related to ‘walking’ and will link back to this one.
Participation by Gender
Source: NSGA, Statistical Abstract of the USA
Participation by Age
Source: NSGA, Statistical Abstract of the USA
Walking as a means of exercise clearly skews older (49% of participants 45 or older) and female (62.5% female). This data is also supported by the footwear spending data as you’ll see below.
Footwear Spending by Type of Shoe
Walking shoes accounted for 33% of the $12.5 billion dollars spent on footwear in 2007 (data for 2008 were projected to be similar and 2009 data are not available yet but if anything, I’d expect this to be more pronounced.)
Walking shoe Purchasers by Gender & Age
Digging into the walking shoe purchasers show that the same trends apply as the overall participation in walking. 45-64 is the biggest age group and the percentage of female users is identical to the percentage of female walkers.
Search Trends for Walking & Walking Shoes
The chart below shows data from Google Insights for ‘exercise walking’ and ‘walking shoes’ from 2008 to 2010.
There isn’t much seasonality, but ‘walking shoes’ are searched for 5 times more often than ‘exercise walking.’ This surprised me initially, but intuitively it makes sense that people would be searching for ‘walking shoes’ as opposed to for ‘exercise walking.’ The same caveats as those in our comments on running shoes apply – be careful of trademarked designs & logos.
Top Searches Related to ‘Exercise Walking’
Conclusions
- Walking for exercise is the top leisure activity in the USA in terms of participation with close to 100 million people taking part in 2008!
- Demographically speaking, the participants skew older & female; the top age segment is 45-64 years old.
- Walking shoes represent the top footwear category in the USA and the demographics (not surprisingly) map closely with walkers.
- ‘Walking shoes’ should be part of your keywording strategy since they are a high volume search query
- Top related keywords are: “exercise, weight loss, calories, walking shoes”
I think the demographic trends around walking are fairly clear. This lines up well with general demand for imagery around ‘active seniors’ and this is something I’ll dive into in more detail in the second part of this post. Stay tuned and comments and feedback are always appreciated!







5 Responses
Thank You for deep and profound research of microstoc nishes.
Don't You planing to make a research on weddings, because the supply of images in that category seems to be enormous, but there not so much indeed good conceptual images to choose from.
Very interested Rahul. Thanks for the research, it's very useful info. When it comes to advertising I do wonder though. When looking through magazine racks there seem to be many more 'Runner' type magazines than 'Walker' magazines. Perhaps most active walkers aspire to be active runners. Kind of like body building magazines being read by people who don't work out a lot.
The most repeated advice from doctors to boomers and seniors is 'start walking' . The second is "get your excercise in the pool" Since bathing fashion isn't the best look for those over a certain age, walking wins.
This is a great point, Steve. I wonder if more of the walking imagery is incorporated into more senior lifestyle oriented magazines. The aspirational argument is an interesting one too.
[...] About This Post This is the second post in a two-post series about Walking for exercise. The first post focused on general search & demographic trends. This post is focused on stock photography trends relating to walking for exercise. _ Stock [...]