Traditional Retailers Dominate Global E-Shopping
TRADITIONAL RETAILERS DOMINATE GLOBAL E-SHOPPING REPORT
Nielsen//NetRatings’ first global analytical data
highlights
online success of offline brands in Asia
Pacific and Europe
AUCKLAND: February 15, 2001 – Nielsen//NetRatings, the world’s largest and fastest growing Internet audience measurement service, today released its first-ever analysis of e-commerce activity across Asia Pacific and Europe, finding traditional retailers have begun to successfully transition their brands online, enjoying blockbuster holiday shopping seasons as a result.
Nielsen//NetRatings is a service provided by ACNielsen eRatings.com (a venture between ACNielsen Corp., NYSE: ART and NetRatings, Inc., Nasdaq: NTRT), Nielsen Media Research and NetRatings, Inc.
The findings are part of Nielsen//NetRatings’ new Global Analytical Services, which provide value-added analysis to Nielsen//NetRatings’ industry-leading Internet audience measurement data. Previously available only in the US, the services are now available to clients in Asia Pacific and Europe, reporting on regional and local data and trends across the 19 countries measured by Nielsen//NetRatings, with continued expansion as additional countries come online.
“Clients already refer to Nielsen//NetRatings to find out who’s online, where they’re going, what ads they’re viewing and clicking on and how much time they spend online,” said William Pulver, president of ACNielsen eRatings.com.
“For the first time, clients can now use our Global Analytical Services to access global information on goods and services purchased via the Web, media content and use of online interactive services, as well as traffic and loyalty measures crucial for making financial decisions. No other service offers both analysis and data on as many countries as Nielsen//NetRatings. Today’s announcement is another significant step towards our goal of becoming the global currency for Internet measurement.”
Traditional brands
and e-greetings card sites grab limelight in Asia
Pacific
“The first report for Asia Pacific and Europe
shows clicks-and-mortar retailers drove the online holiday
shopping trend in both regions,” said Brian Milnes,
spokesman for Nielsen//NetRatings Global Analytical
Services.
“In Asia Pacific, we observed a two-pronged
growth pattern. On the one hand, more surfers visited
e-shopping sites, while on the other hand traditional
retailers and local companies began to attract new levels of
web traffic.
“In New Zealand, for instance, visits to
Amazon.com and Flyingpig.co.nz surged leading up to
Christmas.”
“Analysis shows traditional retailers made a
strong showing on the list of top e-Commerce sites in the
region. In Australia, seven of the top 25 e-shopping sites
were traditional local retailers. These included Harvey
Norman, David Jones and Myer Direct, all of which
experienced surges in web traffic during the period with the
biggest increases in December.”
Milnes attributed the
online success of clicks-and-mortar brands to consumer trust
and visibility. “The crucial advantage these sites have over
their pureplay counterparts is trust,” he said. “In a year
when e-commerce received little but bad publicity, the
support offered to consumers by a familiar name was worth
more than any advertising.
“Clicks-and-mortar retailers
were also able to start their holiday preparations and
marketing earlier and with higher visibility than their
online competitors. Leaflets and signs in stores clearly
alerted customers to the existence of the sites and the
availability of goods online. Many sites ensured they
offered as full a range of goods online as possible, even
low-ticket items, and many encouraged users to compare items
and ranges, aware that price comparison is one of the main
reasons surfers visit e-commerce sites.”
Milnes said web
traffic increased in all Asia Pacific countries during the
holiday season with Singapore recording the highest growth
jumping 31% from September to December. E-shopping visitor
levels rose 10.7% in Australia, 8.5% in New Zealand and 4.4%
in Hong Kong over the same period.
“It is thought much of
the growth in Singapore can be attributed to visitors to
e-greeting card sites, with the majority of growth in that
market taking place in December,” he said. “Indeed, web
audiences to greeting card sites surged across the region,
pushing these sites to the top of the list of the fastest
growers.”
“In New Zealand, Bluemountain.com,
egreetings.com and americangreetings.com all increased their
web audience ratings over the holiday season.”
Milnes
added the Chinese New Year holiday in late January was
expected to keep these sites on top for another month in
Hong Kong and Singapore, especially sites that offered
Chinese greeting cards.
“Hallmark.com recorded a major
increase in all markets,” he said. “In Australia,
Hallmark.com leapt 237% in three months. In Hong Kong, it
gained 281% growth to reach nearly 4% of the active
universe. In New Zealand, it surged 144% in three months,
and in Singapore it grew 508% from November, the highest
growth rate in the region.”
Hong Kong home-based surfers
seemed to lag behind the e-shopping growth observed in the
rest of the Asia Pacific region. “Because Hong Kong has the
highest reach levels in the region for online community
sites, entertainment sites and search engine/portal sites,
it may be that people in Hong Kong have already accepted the
value of the Internet,” Milnes said. “The initial uptake of
e-shopping might be restricted because Hong Kong surfers are
waiting for the appearance of more well developed and secure
Chinese/Cantonese e-shops.”
He pointed out the compact
island geographies of both Hong Kong and Singapore added an
additional obstacle for e-commerce sites. “Since both
cities are custom-built for offline shopping, online
retailers must add even more value to convince shoppers to
stay home and shop on their computers when going out is so
relatively easy,” he said.
Offline brands capture UK
users more than other European markets
In Europe, the
increased online dominance of clicks and bricks retailers
was most noticeable in the UK where e-commerce traffic to
the websites of traditional retailers’ sites grew by a
higher percentage between October and November than traffic
to the entire e-commerce sector.
However, this trend was
not as marked in other parts of the region, suggesting
offline brands in other parts of Europe were less adept at
leveraging their brand equity online.
“In Germany, for
instance, none of the top 10 e-commerce brands in the run-up
to Christmas were clicks-and-mortar retailers,” Milnes said.
“Books and gift retailers, auction houses and online
shopping portals predominated. In France the picture was
rosier, with five clicks-and-mortar stores in the top 20
e-commerce sites.
“France is a fascinating e-commerce
example because it has largely resisted the temptation of
the big American brands. The recently launched Amazon.fr has
caught the online public’s imagination, but Amazon.com has
never performed as well in France as it has in the other
major European markets. One might expect local loyalty to
mean that French clicks-and-mortar brands would do
especially well, but currently French pureplays are
benefiting just as much.”
Lessons Learned: Looking
forward
Milnes identified several lessons from the 2000
global holiday shopping season for
e-commerce sites
looking to increase their success in 2001. “The
35-49-year-old age group is apparently reluctant to use
non-established brands, so for pureplays the lesson must be
to find ways to expand their appeal to this group,” he said.
“For example, Amazon has become a major online retailer by
creating a clean, easy-to-use and easy-to-search online
environment and then adding user-specific features. User
reviews and wish lists which create the site’s sense of
community are very much secondary to the simplicity of
purchasing from the site.
“For traditional retailers,
the mission must be to recreate online the brand’s key
selling points, while taking advantage of the web’s
possibilities for research and bearing in mind that
customers who visit and don’t buy are far less of a wasted
effort for clicks-and-mortar sites than for pureplays.
“Established retailers are only beginning to realize
their online potential – most of their sites are very basic
– and the successful clicks-and-mortar brands in 2001 will
be those who use their online channels to increase customer
loyalty to the integrated brand rather than to make a few
swift dollars at the peak times of year.”
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