Make It Big When Holiday Shopping For Seniors
Make It Big When
Holiday Shopping For Seniors
BETHEL â Forget that paisley dress tie you found on sale. Chuck those chocolate-covered cherries, and save that scented candle for a dark and stormy night. When it comes to the gifts they would like for the holidays, Americaâs seniors have spoken and the message is this: Think Big!
In a survey completed by 647 Home Instead Senior Care clients nationwide, the top gift choice was a large-print calendar highlighting family membersâ birthdays and anniversaries. Among other top 10 gift preferences were a framed, enlarged favorite family photograph and a large numbered television remote control.
Home Instead Senior Care, a provider of non-medical home care and companionship for the elderly, provided 25 distinctively different gift choices for seniors to rank âVery Useful,â âSomewhat Useful,â or âForget It!â in a first-ever senior holiday gift survey.
Seniors surveyed were not eager to air any complaints. Only 34 percent answered the question: âBesides a fruitcake, what is the one gift you donât want this year?â The most disliked gifts mentioned were chocolate-covered cherries, a dress tie, jewelry, and candles.
Seniors had plenty of favorites, though. Among the other top 10 gift choices, in order, following the calendar at 87 percent, were gift certificates to a grocery store or pharmacy, 84 percent; gift certificates to a favorite restaurant, 82 percent; cordless telephone, 81 percent; box of assorted greeting cards and postage stamps, 79 percent; a framed, enlarged favorite family photograph, 76 percent; easy chair or recliner, 75 percent; heating pad/water bottle, 74 percent; slippers, 72 percent; and large-numbered television remote control, 70 percent.
The desire for companionship and items that seniors can use in their own homes to maintain their independence, such as cordless phones, also played prominently in the survey results. âEven though the results represent a national survey of respondents, the average age of whom is 821/2 , they accurately reflected the thoughts and desires of seniors in our community,â said Sharon Massafra, owner of the Home Instead Senior Care Office serving the upper Fairfield County area. âSeniors are the same everywhere. They all want to remain independent and in their homes for as long as possible.â
Another prevailing message from the survey: You donât have to spend a lot of money to make your senior happy. Fifty-seven percent said a gift of $25 or less was the most appropriate.
At 78 percent, a replaced piece or two of china or silverware was at the top of the list of least preferred gifts from among the 25 choices presented in the survey. Following, in the least preferred category, were reputable appraisal of antiques or collectibles, 65 percent; coupon organizer, 56 percent; basket of treats or toys for a pet, 43 percent; long-handled shoe horn, 41 percent; book of personal service coupons from grandchildren to do chores around the house, 40 percent; prepaid long-distance telephone card, 39 percent; fire extinguisher, 36 percent; and assembled family photo album, 35 percent.
The company distributed 1,800 surveys to its clients with 526 (82 percent) females and 116 (18 percent) males completing the survey for a return response rate of 35.7 percent.