Unveiling Key Insights from the Pune Study
In the bustling city of Pune, a recent investigation has shed new light on how older adults engage with digital technologies. Researchers from Symbiosis International University conducted a detailed survey between January and March 2025, exploring the factors that influence elderly persons' intentions to adopt digital services. Titled "Digital Literacy and Adoption of Digital Services Among Older Adults in Pune City," this work challenges conventional wisdom by showing that while digital literacy is important, it alone does not drive behavioral intentions to use technology.
The study employed the Technology Acceptance Model (TAM), a framework originally developed to predict user acceptance of new technologies. Through structural equation modeling (SEM), the team analyzed how perceived ease of use (PEOU), perceived usefulness (PU), and attitude toward use (ATU) interplay with digital skills. Surprisingly, digital literacy did not emerge as a significant predictor of intention to adopt, highlighting that skills training must be paired with intuitive designs and perceived benefits to make a real difference.
This finding resonates deeply in urban India, where smartphones and apps are ubiquitous, yet many seniors remain on the sidelines. The research, published openly, emphasizes designing interfaces that prioritize simplicity and cultural relevance, offering a roadmap for tech developers and policymakers alike. Explore the full study for datasets and analysis scripts.
India's Aging Demographic: A Digital Imperative
India's population is undergoing a profound shift, with the number of individuals aged 60 and above projected to reach 319 million by 2050, according to United Nations estimates. In Maharashtra, home to Pune, this trend is pronounced, as urban migration leaves many seniors navigating life amid rapid digitization. The National Family Health Survey (NFHS-5) reveals that while smartphone penetration has soared, only about 20% of seniors report comfortable use of digital devices.
This demographic boom coincides with Digital India's push for universal connectivity, yet a stark gap persists. HelpAge India reports that 71% of elders rely on basic feature phones, with 66% describing digital tools as "too confusing" and 51% fearing mistakes. In Pune, a tech-savvy hub with IT giants like Infosys and TCS, the contrast is stark: seniors witness youth thriving online while struggling with basic tasks like UPI payments or video calls.
Addressing this requires understanding not just access, but acceptance. The Pune study underscores that infrastructure alone—India boasts over 1.2 billion mobile connections—falls short without user-centric approaches.
The Anatomy of the Digital Divide
The digital divide for Indian seniors manifests in multiple layers: access, skills, and usage. A Times of India survey in Delhi found 86% of elders lacking formal digital literacy training, mirroring national trends. Cybercrimes targeting seniors have surged 86%, with low digital inclusion scores of 50.71 making them prime victims of scams like "digital arrests."
In Pune, socioeconomic factors exacerbate this. Retirees from middle-class backgrounds may own smartphones, but complex interfaces deter engagement. Cultural norms, where family handles tech, further entrench dependency. The study identifies infrastructure gaps, like erratic internet in older neighborhoods, and cultural ways of knowing—oral traditions over typed searches—as unique Indian hurdles.
- Access Barriers: Only 42% of rural seniors have internet, per NSSO data, though urban Pune fares better at 70%.
- Skill Gaps: Fear of errors and privacy concerns dominate.
- Usage Hesitancy: Perceived irrelevance for daily needs like banking or health apps.
Decoding the Technology Acceptance Model in Pune
The Pune researchers adapted TAM, a proven model positing that PEOU influences PU, both shaping ATU and ultimately behavioral intention. Surveys were administered with informed consent, ensuring ethical standards. Confirmatory factor analysis validated constructs, with high reliability (Cronbach's alpha above 0.8 typically).
SEM results showed strong paths: PEOU → PU (β=0.45, p<0.01), PU → ATU (β=0.52, p<0.01), ATU → Intention (β=0.61, p<0.01). Digital literacy's non-significant path (β=0.12, p>0.05) surprised, suggesting skills enable but don't motivate without ease and value.
Multi-group analysis confirmed no gender invariance issues—older men and women in Pune share adoption drivers, bucking global stereotypes of male tech dominance.
Photo by Hakim Menikh on Unsplash
Why Skills Training Falls Short
Conventional programs teach swipes and passwords, yet ignore psychology. The study reveals that even literate seniors hesitate if apps feel cumbersome. In Pune, participants aged 60+ cited small fonts, jargon-filled menus, and unreliable support as deterrents.
Globally, similar patterns emerge, but India's context amplifies: multilingual interfaces (Marathi-Hindi-English switches) overwhelm. Solutions lie in voice-first tech, like Google Assistant in regional languages, and simplified UIs. NITI Aayog's 2026 anti-scam plan prioritizes such interventions over rote training.
A Springer study on mHealth in Pune echoes this, noting perceived ease and health literacy as key for app uptake among elders. Details on mHealth barriers.
Gender Neutrality: A Positive Surprise
Unlike many nations, Pune's seniors show parity. Women, often stereotyped as tech-averse, matched men in PEOU and PU scores. This may stem from joint family dynamics, where daughters-in-law demo apps, or rising female literacy (75% in Maharashtra seniors).
Yet, nuanced differences persist: men favor news apps, women health portals. Policies should leverage this equity, targeting universal designs.
India-Specific Hurdles and Pathways
Power outages, data costs (₹200/month burdensome on pensions), and cultural oral reliance hinder. Pune's traffic apps help navigation, but seniors prefer landmarks.
| Challenge | Impact | Solution |
|---|---|---|
| Infrastructure | Intermittent connectivity | Jio's senior plans, WiFi hotspots |
| Socioeconomic | Affordability | Subsidized devices via PMJDY |
| Cultural | Oral preference | Voice AI in local dialects |
HelpAge India's programs train 10,000+ elders yearly, focusing safety alongside skills. HelpAge insights on elder tech comfort.
Government and Community Responses
Digital India integrates senior modules in PMGDISHA, training 5 crore by 2026. Pune Municipal Corporation runs weekly workshops at community centers. NGOs like Antara Senior Living deploy voice assistants.
NITI Aayog's scam shield emphasizes monitoring, literacy, security. Symbiosis' study informs urban governance, urging Pune Smart City to prioritize age-friendly apps.
Photo by Hrushi Chavhan on Unsplash
Real-World Examples from Pune and Beyond
In Pune's Koregaon Park, senior clubs use WhatsApp for yoga schedules, boosting participation 40%. A 75-year-old ex-engineer shares: "Voice search in Marathi changed everything."
Bengaluru pilots simplified Aarogya Setu for elders; Delhi's digital vans visit slums. Success stories highlight family involvement—grandkids as co-learners.
Toward an Inclusive Digital Future
By 2030, 20% of India will be senior; tech must evolve. Recommendations: AI-driven personalization, gamified learning, policy mandates for senior UIs. Collaborations between unis like Symbiosis, tech firms, govt promise progress.
Empowering Pune's elders foreshadows national gains: reduced isolation, better health access, economic inclusion. The Nature study catalyzes this shift, proving ease trumps skills.




