Over half of Kiwis don’t want to engage with brands online
Media release
22 November 2011
TNS Digital Life study: Over half
of Kiwis don’t want to engage with brands online
Businesses are wasting time and money trying to
reach people online without realising many resent brands
invading their social space. This is according to findings
from TNS’s Digital Life study, the most comprehensive view
of online consumer behaviour available today, surveying more
than 72,000 consumers in 60 countries, including over a
thousand New Zealanders.
The race to engage with customers
online has seen businesses across the world develop profiles
on social networks – but TNS’s research reveals that if
these efforts are not carefully targeted and well executed,
they are wasted on over half of their target audience.
54 percent of New Zealanders said they do not want to
engage with brands via social media. But it seems we want to
have our cake and eat it too, with 67 percent admitting to
joining brand communities for a promotion or special
offer.
TNS Managing Director Jason Shoebridge says it’s
no surprise that the push for all brands to engage with
customers on social media has created a huge volume of noise
or ‘digital waste’, which is making it increasingly
difficult for anyone to be heard, and risks alienating
potential customers.
“Whether it’s their email inbox or Facebook news feed, consumers are sick of being constantly bombarded with brand messages. The way for businesses to stand out is to use insight like the Digital Life study to carefully identify and understand their online audience, and target their efforts accordingly. Now more than ever, firms need to deploy precisely tailored strategies to realise the massive opportunity that the online world presents.”
Surprisingly, the study has also revealed that people are more likely to compliment rather than criticise companies online, with 15 percent and 11 percent of Kiwis saying they have posted positive and negative comments online respectively. New Zealanders also tend to value the opinion of other consumers, with 40 percent saying they have asked for advice online, while a third said they had posted product reviews themselves.
When it comes to group buying sites like GrabOne or
shopping on mobile devices, Kiwis are still treading
cautiously compared to global trends. “Kiwi businesses
should take the lessons learned from the online space to the
emerging mobile space. Brands shouldn’t be building
smartphone apps just for the sake of it – they need to
deliver real value to users, otherwise it will just become
another piece of digital waste,” added Mr
Shoebridge. Key
NZ findings: • 40% have
asked for advice on social networks (global 46%) •
15% have praised brands on social networks (global
13%) • 11% have complained about brands on
social networks (global 10%) • 39% think
social networks are a good place to learn about brands
(global 54%) • 23% think social networks are a
good place to buy products (global 40%) • 67%
have joined a brand community for a promotion or special
offer (global 61%) • 54% don’t want to be
bothered by brands on social network (global 53%) •
15% use group buying sites like GrabOne (global
24%) • 33% would use the internet more if it
was cheaper (global 38%) • 10% of mobile
internet users have purchased products using their phone
(global 22%) ENDS About TNS TNS is part of Kantar,
one of the world's largest insight, information and
consultancy groups. Please visit www.tnsglobal.com for more
information.
An interactive data visualisation of the key
findings can be found at www.tnsdigitallife.com
• 33% have written about
products online (47% globally)
About
Digital Life
Digital Life provides
recommendations on how to use digital channels to grow your
business through a precise understanding of human behaviours
and attitudes online. Based on in-depth interviews with over
72,000 people in 60 countries, Digital Life’s size, scale
and detail make it the most comprehensive view of consumer
attitudes and behaviour online, on a global and local
level.
TNS advises
clients on specific growth strategies around new market
entry, innovation, brand switching and stakeholder
management, based on long-established expertise and
market-leading solutions. With a presence in over 80
countries, TNS has more conversations with the world’s
consumers than anyone else and understands individual human
behaviours and attitudes across every cultural, economic and
political region of the world.
ENDS