Who plays bridge? Google consumer survey
#21
Posted 2014-March-07, 07:52
#22
Posted 2014-March-07, 11:16
barmar, on 2014-March-06, 23:24, said:
I don't think I've participated in a Google Poll, but I'm guessing you don't get to see the question before agreeing to participate.
helene_t, on 2014-March-07, 05:14, said:
The poll questions are actually delivered via what's known as "content locking". The questions are served across the DoubleClick display network (which google acquired many yrs ago) and a user can't access the content of various news/content sources until they answer the question. In my opinion, for certain types of surveys you will have much greater bias than other types (depending on the type of question being asked). Additionally, since the nature of the content sites tend to be news-related for the most part, the demographic is likely a more educated demo.
An example:
http://www.hitchedma...cle.php?id=1803
Another issue is, how accurate are responses to a survey when the user simply wants to answer something quickly to receive their "carrot"?
#23
Posted 2014-March-07, 12:44
helene_t, on 2014-March-07, 07:52, said:
I think Uday was trying to gauge the potential market for bridge services, so he's interested in anyone who might find them interesting, not just people who are already involved.
#24
Posted 2014-March-09, 06:50
in those who say they know how to play bridge, do you count all the club players that don't know what they are doing ???
#25
Posted 2014-March-09, 11:02
fluff, on 2014-March-09, 06:50, said:
Of course. You also count people who are playing some variation of auction whist at home and calling it bridge.
#26
Posted 2014-March-12, 15:52
#27
Posted 2014-March-13, 12:01
#28
Posted 2014-March-13, 12:25
#29
Posted 2014-March-13, 13:35
barmar, on 2014-March-06, 11:20, said:
Statistics about people who are members but never actually play don't seem very important. They're probably also a tiny fraction of the membership -- how many people would keep paying ACBL dues if they don't care to play? So I doubt the difference biases the statistics significantly.
As my regular partner became the Tournament Chairman for the Philadelphia Unit of the ACBL about 2 years ago, and has rather successfully pursued methods to increase attendance at our tournaments, I learned a few things about who plays bridge from him.
For one thing, it turns out that a very sizable portion of ACBL members do not earn any masterpoints in any given year. Of the 168,000 or so members, over 20,000 have less than 5 masterpoints. And that is not because they are new members - it is because they don't earn masterpoints.
Now, you said "earned masterpoints" is inteded as a proxy for "actively plays bridge." But there is a significant portion of bridge players who do not go to bridge clubs or tournaments. They never play in any games that award masterpoints. They play in home games or at Country Clubs or at money bridge clubs, but not at any clubs or tournaments that award masterpoints. I would venture to say that none of us lives in that world, and they do not live in our world. But the two bridge playing worlds definitely co-exist.
#30
Posted 2014-March-13, 14:14
ArtK78, on 2014-March-13, 13:35, said:
For most of the 1970s and 1980s, my parents ran their parish's Ladies Bridge Club and Couples Bridge Club. Best I can remember, each year there were about 20 pairs of ladies and about a dozen couples who played, which presumably rivaled the size of our club games. Maybe there were 3 ACBL members among the parish leagues. Although the leagues have long since disbanded, many of the players, now in their 70s and 80s, still regularly play house bridge together. A couple of them are even BBO members. None of them would ever have any interest in playing ACBL events.
#31
Posted 2014-March-13, 17:18
It is hard to keep them once they're married and have children.
It is very common around here for people to get "back into" bridge on retirement, having played it in University, and giving it up for time.
Which is why I see the "we're not keeping the juniors, let's keep aiming our recruitment at the new retirees" as so shortsighted.
But that's just me.
#32
Posted 2014-March-14, 10:21
Vampyr, on 2014-March-13, 12:25, said:
That may help for parts of the country, but I don't see it being a practical general strategy.
The last page of the EBU AGM minutes http://www.ebu.co.uk.../02-october.pdf shows the distribution of juniors, county by county. It is clear there are several clusters around the large cities and top universities, but that the numbers are trivially small in the rest of the country. Bedfordshire now has no juniors, and I would think it quite feasible that we might never have another one. (We had very few anyway - those that came from Bedford School mostly stopped playing on going to university; the few that continued usually reaffiliated somewhere else. There is now no bridge teaching at Bedford School, so even that source has dried up.)
The only people coming into the game are retirees, or those with adult children. Of these, the numbers that wish to play serious bridge are very small. Non-affiliated clubs are surviving reasonably well, but otherwise the situation doesn't look at all promising.
#33
Posted 2014-March-14, 10:30
I wonder where the 25 juniors in Yorkshire are. I think I have run into only three or four of them, having lived here for three years.
#34
Posted 2014-March-14, 12:29
Just play bridge - a stream of totalpoint hands
Bridge 4 -a stream of sets of 4 totalpoint hands, a daily leaderboard for top N scores, atari style ( ie, you enter intitials if u break through)
Video Bridge - a video bridge variant where you "gamble" with fake money
All the games are anonymous, and all the game use the faster/dumber basic bot.
Is there a large group of players out there that "just wants to play bridge" in the sense that my uncle Herb just wants to play Minesweeper? Maybe we, who play duplicate bridge, are too walled off from the "real" bridge players out there.
Anyway, that's what drove us to try the survey on a whim. I'm not as interested in teaching bridge with these tools ( they aren't suitable ) as much as I am in servicing people who might not be interested enough to register and join the BBO community
#35
Posted 2014-March-15, 02:33
uday, on 2014-March-14, 12:29, said:
I think people have different desires for different times.
My mother plays social bridge with her friends, but on her computer she plays a simple video poker game. I love duplicate bridge, but when I'm watching TV I play a solitaire game called Forty Thieves almost obsessively.
That's where I think our solitaire bridge fits in -- they're relatively mindless, for when you don't want a really taxing game.
#36
Posted 2014-March-15, 06:59
barmar, on 2014-March-15, 02:33, said:
Not only that. Bridge requires four people, no more, no fewer. It can be difficult to regularly put together a gathering of that exact number (or multiples thereof).
#37
Posted 2014-March-15, 09:40
There is a school of thought (probably originating with rubber players) that if one plays a basic game of bridge (basic as in bidding with very few conventions) but being proficient in declarer play and astute in defence one can play with a great number of partners.
If BBO had an area which could accommodate a natural bidding system with minimal conventions it might encourage club players out there to play online.
In such an environment these players would gain experience of internet bridge, meet other like-minded people and form partnerships and some hopefully would progress to more competitive bridge.
In the UK we have some competitions known as ‘no fears’ where one is only allowed to use minimal conventions. I personally do not like these but players who would not dream of playing in competitions enter these. I can, however, see the appeal to those who do not have serious partnerships and it would also have an appeal, even to me, when you are going to play with a pickup partner.
#38
Posted 2014-March-15, 10:33
mycroft, on 2014-March-13, 17:18, said:
It is hard to keep them once they're married and have children.
It is very common around here for people to get "back into" bridge on retirement, having played it in University, and giving it up for time.
Which is why I see the "we're not keeping the juniors, let's keep aiming our recruitment at the new retirees" as so shortsighted.
But that's just me.
The people I played with at university 25-30 years ago were the basis of teams that won the junior worlds, the gold cup etc (I couldn't get into the university first team). Andrew Dyson played for a bit after that but I haven't seen him for a fair while, John Hobson gave up to further his career, Ed Linfield plays much less than he used to, Richard Plackett has recently returned to bridge. I don't think either of my two partners from that time play much any more.
Norfolk is listed with no juniors (I'm surprised we're not listed with 1, we were the year before), and I've only seen 2 people much under 30 that have played here in the recent past, and in my late 40s, I'm still one of our "young" players, there are only 3 people who can play much above kitchen bridge standard in the county that are younger than me.
#39
Posted 2014-March-15, 10:57
uday, on 2014-March-06, 08:39, said:
Today I stumbled across what I think is an excellent demonstration of "who plays bridge". I presume that Frank Stewart's widely-published bridge column is targeted to "the bridge playing public". Today's column includes this:
Quote
Answer: At one time, the proper response would have been a "temporizing" 2 clubs. No direct heart raise was correct. Players now use "limit" raises; most would jump to three hearts...
If "the bridge-playing public" is not familiar with limit raises, then this group is completely separate from ACBL club/tournament players. Of course, this dichotomy is not unique to bridge. Showing amazing similarity to the ACBL survey, a 2005 participation study by the United States Tennis Assn (USTA) and the Tennis Industry Association (TIA) determined that 24.7 million Americans played tennis. There are 330,000 players in USTA leagues. (Some, but not all that many, play tournaments and not leagues.) I expect that similar numbers could be quoted for chess. I'm not sure where I'm going with this, but it seems that if BBO wants to tap into "the bridge playing public", one possible start would be [as has been suggested multiple times in this forum] creating a House Bridge Club running parallel to the MBC to bring like-minded players together.
#40
Posted 2014-March-15, 11:10
Bbradley62, on 2014-March-15, 10:57, said:
I wonder if he's likely to know any more than the rest of us who "the bridge playing public" consists of. I'm not sure that I would take this as more accurate than the best guesses of the rest of us.
London UK