Top 10 Leisure Activities in the USA
Posted on January 31st, 2010 in Analytics, General, SEO, keywording, lookstat | 5 Comments »
Summer is just around the corner, from a shoot planning perspective.
Since the time to begin uploading seasonal images seems to be 2-3 months ahead of an event (see our Thanksgiving & Easter posts) and shoots need to happen well before that, we will be profiling the top leisure activities in the USA early. Similar to our hunting post, I’ll be looking at search trends and highlighting the best-selling stock images associated with those activities.
When deciding to post a list of the top activities, the metric you choose to rank on is important. I’ve included the fastest growing as well as those with the highest number of participants in this post. (We looked at the top activities based on consumer spending last week.)
Fastest Growing Leisure Activities in the USA
The chart below shows the ten fastest growing leisure activities in the USA, measured by the % increase in participation from 2007 to 2008 (2009 data is not yet available.) These data are from the National Sporting Goods Association.

Since growth rates by themselves aren’t meaningful, I’ve included a data table which lists the number of participants and the number added from 2007 to 2008. The data are ranked by growth rate and the top activities in terms of participation are highlighted in bold.

- Running didn’t surprise me much since it’s so easy to get started.
- I was a little surprised by the popularity of ‘exercising with equipment’ especially as it is not the same as ‘working out at a club/gym’ as you can see from the table below.
- Snowboarding grew a lot, but off a small base.
- Even though baseball may be ‘America’s pastime,’ soccer had more participants.
- Yoga was bigger and grew faster than baseball or soccer.
Top 10 Leisure Activities Based on Number of Participants in 2008

- I didn’t expect bowling or fishing to be that high on the list (probably my own biases at work.)
- I think age segmentation will be important. For example, I expect the participation in walking to skew older. (I’ll try and address this aspect in the individual sport profiles.)
Stay Tuned (And Share What You’re Interested In)
Over the next few weeks we’ll be publishing activity profiles regularly. I’ll be focusing on the fastest-growing list but will leave out winter sports for now since they won’t be of much use from a shoot planning perspective. (If you’d like to see them anyway, let me know.)
As always, if there’s a specific topic you’d like to see covered, please let me know and I’ll see if we can work it in.


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