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British
Online Shopping to Exceed £10 Billion in 2000
NOP
Research Group
Date: 15 February 2000
Online
shopping is predicted to exceed £10 billion this year,
according to the findings of an NOP survey published today.
The Internet User Profile Survey found that over 3 million
of the Web’s regular 12 million users had shopped online
in the four weeks before Christmas, a three-fold increase
over the same period in 1998. NOP estimates that British
consumers spent £3.2 billion online in 1999 and forecasts
that online spending in 2000 will easily exceed £10 billion.
The biggest growth category for online sales is groceries,
with over 200,000 people doing at least some of their
everyday shopping through the Web. Online book buying
continues to storm ahead, with the number of Web users
buying books increasing by over 50% in 1999. Almost half
(49%) of all Web users now buy books online; 31% buy CDs
or music.
Richard Jameson, Internet research director at NOP said:
"Contrary to some recent speculation, the online shopping
experience remains a generally positive one, with shoppers
planning significant increases in their spend in 2000.
Online grocery shopping is beginning to make its mark
and supermarket home delivery vans will become an increasingly
common sight."
E-Commerce
in Britain to reach £9.5 billion in 2000
NOP
Research Group
Date: 30 August 1999
Almost
one-and-a-half million adults in Britain used the World
Wide Web (WWW) in the four weeks to June 1999 to purchase
a product or service, spending some £239 million in the
process. This represents an increase of 44 per cent on
the number of online shoppers in December 1998 according
to the 8th wave of the Internet User Profile Study, published
today by the NOP Research Group.
"Our
findings show that annual spend via the Internet in Britain
is approaching the £3 billion mark this year," says Rob
Lawson of NOP, "with current trends suggesting this figure
could be as high as £9.5 billion by the end of 2000. More
than three quarters of those who are shopping online say
that they would expect to be spending at least twice this
amount in twelve months time. This demonstrates a growing
confidence in the use of the Internet for shopping as
an increasing proportion of users become more familiar
and comfortable with the process of undertaking online
transactions."
Areas
which saw notable upturns compared with December 1998
included music and CDs, leisure travel and clothes.
One
of the main areas of change during the past 12 months
has been in the method of payment for purchases online,
with a significant upturn in the proportion of shoppers
prepared to disclose their credit card details online.
In addition, eight out of ten (79 per cent) of those who
now shop online disclose credit card details, compared
with just over four out of ten (42 per cent) 12 months
earlier.
Amongst
all users of the Internet, nearly a quarter (23 per cent)
said that they had disclosed their credit card details
at some stage, more than twice the proportion twelve months
previously. Interestingly, amongst those who had not disclosed
credit card details online, 27 per cent said that they
would consider disclosing details in the future on the
Internet, compared with only 18 per cent in June 1998.
"Although
it is still a minority of Internet users who are disclosing
their credit card details online, this is the first time
in four years that we have seen a softening in attitudes
amongst those who have yet to release their details,"
continues Lawson. "People are increasingly conscious that
this is something they will be doing in the future."
Other
key findings include: One in five (21 per cent) of people
who used the Internet during the six months to June 1999
used it for home shopping, a significant increase from
just eight per cent in the six months to June 1998 Almost
one in ten Internet users say they already have Digital
TV. A further third (34 per cent) say they are ‘certain’
or ‘likely’ to get Digital TV in the next 12 months
"The
Internet is attracting over 11,000 new adult users in
Britain every day," continues Rob Lawson, "with some 12.69
million adults having accessed the Internet at least once
in the twelve months to June 1999. This represents a 46
per cent increase compared with a similar period to June
1998. We are also seeing a significant proportion of the
Internet population adopting – or likely to adopt – Digital
TV within 12 months and as this evolves into true Interactive
TV, it will offer an alternative means of Internet access
for current users, as well as expanding the overall online
population in Britain."
This
latest research was undertaken by screening 20,284 adults
in Great Britain using NOP’s three Omnibus surveys and
following up with telephone interviews between 1 June
and 1 July 1999 amongst a representative sample of 1,016
Internet users aged 15 years and over.
More
than 10,000 new users try the Internet each day in Britain
- Survey findings
NOP
Research Group
Date: March 1999
The
Internet is attracting 10,900 new adult users in Britain
every day, according to research published today by the
NOP Research Group as part of its regular Internet User
Profile Study.
The
research also shows that some 10.6 million adults accessed
the Internet at least once during 1998, a 48 per cent
increase compared with 1997 when the figure stood at just
over 7 million.
"These
findings suggest that Internet usage in Britain has undergone
spectacular growth in recent months," says NOP. s Rob
Lawson. "One of the principal factors explaining this
was the introduction, by Dixons, of Freeserve in the last
quarter of 1998 which has given the Company somewhere
in the region of one fifth of the market overnight. However,
even removing this from the equation, overall growth was
still strong during the six months to December 1998."
Perhaps
most significantly, the free service providers are also
attracting a new type of Internet user - generally older
and from the C2DE social groups - where previously, users
had been from predominantly younger age groups and ABC1
social groups."
The
location of Internet usage has shifted significantly during
the past year. By December 1998, some 6 million people
had used the Internet from home compared with only 3.4
million by December 1997, an increase of 76 per cent.
In contrast, the proportion of those accessing the Internet
from work increased by only 54 per cent over the same
period, from 3.5 million to 5.3 million people.
Web
usage increased considerably during the six months to
December 1998, with almost three quarters (73 per cent)
of Internet users saying they had used the World Wide
Web (WWW) during the previous four weeks. This compares
with just 60 per cent in the six months to June 1998.
Usage
of the Web is also starting to demonstrate seasonal patterns.
The Web was used, on average, almost seven times by each
user during the previous four weeks in both December 1997
and 1998, compared with only just over five times in both
June 1997 and June 1998. This suggests that the winter
months are proving more popular for accessing the Web
than the summer ones.
The
Web is increasingly being seen as a means of accessing
information for a wide range of purposes. For example,
in the past four weeks, some 1.2 million people have used
the WWW to search for a job or employment and more than
1.9 million people have used it to look for travel information
over the same time period. Other purposes include:
- Searching for information on a particular company 2.9
million
-
Reading newspapers online 1.9 million
- Searching for financial information 1.3 million
Most
importantly, perhaps, the findings reveal that 1.3 million
users shopped online in the second half of 1998, making
a total of some 4.8 million purchases and spending £470
million between them.
"With
users becoming more familiar with the Web as a primary
source of information," NOP. s Rob Lawson continues, "their
confidence in using it for an increasingly complex range
of activities is also growing. Internet usage in Britain
will clearly be a mass market activity by the beginning
of the millennium as a growing number of people are becoming
familiar with the medium via locations other than the
workplace."
This
latest research was undertaken by screening 21,000 households
in Great Britain and following up with telephone interviews
in December 1998 amongst a representative sample of 1,000
Internet users aged 15 years and over.
Online
shopping becoming significant, says survey
NOP
Research Group
Date: 12 March 1997
The
number of World Wide Web (WWW) users in Britain shopping
on-line increased by over 100 per cent during the six-month
period between June and December 1996, according to NOP
Research Group's most recent Internet User Profile Study
which is published today. Over a quarter of a million
people are now shopping on-line each month.
In
addition, the proportion of current users who said that
they would consider shopping on-line during the next six
months increased by 69 per cent over the same period.
Of
those making purchases during the past four weeks, three
out of five spent less than 50.00 whilst one in seven
spent more than 500.00. The findings suggest that on-line
shopping transactions totalling in excess of 1 billion
will take place during 1997 (given current levels of expenditure).
The
most popular types of purchases were computer hardware
(27 per cent) and software (23 per cent) products, which
were made predominantly by business users. However, respondents
had also used the WWW to purchase books, CDs, travel tickets
and holidays. In addition, just over a third (36 per cent)
of all WWW users said they would consider purchasing banking
and financial services on-line during the next six months.
Key
findings of the research are:
Some
11 per cent of WWW users said they had shopped on-line
in the last four weeks.
Some
22 per cent of all Internet users said they would consider
on-line shopping in the next six months.
Of
those saying they would consider shopping on-line in the
next six months, two out of five are home users (who would
be expected to provide the greater volume of sales) while
the remaining
60
per cent are business users who tend to spend more per
item (all respondents who spend 1,000 or more a month
are business users).
One
in ten Internet users have now disclosed their credit
card details on the Internet compared with just one in
25 a year ago.
Over
the past six months the proportion of users sourcing travel
information has increased from 16 per cent to 23 per cent
of all Internet users while those using the medium to
find holiday information has increased from 13 per cent
to 18 per cent.
The
number of current WWW users in Britain increased from
just over one million to almost two-and-a-half million
between December 1995 and December 1996.
The
number of people who have tried the Internet in Britain
increased from 2.7 million in December 1995 to 4.6 million
in December 1996.
The
findings indicate that approximately ten per cent of people
in Britain have now tried the Internet.
Future
intention to use the Internet is highest amongst 15-24
year olds, who constitute almost 40 per cent of all users.
Around two thirds of users in the workplace are from large
businesses (65 per cent are from firms with 200 or more
employees), although small firms are beginning to emerge
strongly. The number of users among firms with fewer than
50 employees has more than doubled during the twelve months
to the end of December 1996 and now account for just over
a quarter of all Internet users in the workplace.
No
single reason for purchasing products and services on-line
dominated, with respondents attaching relatively equal
weight to factors such as ease of use, convenience, cost
and availability of information on-line compared with
other sources.
"The
findings suggest that a small but growing number of Web
users - at work and, increasingly, at home - are beginning
to realise the potential of the World Wide Web as an important
medium for the purchase of products and services," says
NOP's Richard Jameson. "It seems likely that the World
Wide Web will offer businesses considerable scope for
sales opportunities in the future as users become more
familiar with procedures and less concerned about the
security implications of shopping via the Internet."
This
latest research was undertaken, by telephone, in December
1996 amongst a nationally representative sample of 1,000
Internet users aged 15 years and over in Great Britain.
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