By Keith Regan E-Commerce Times
01/08/02 11:50 AM PT
Online holiday spending peaked during the week ending December 14th, when $2.6 billion
was spent, according to the latest eSpending report for NetRatings.
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Online spending reached US$13.8 billion during the 2001 holiday
season, a 15 percent increase over the year before, according to a
report from Harris Interactive (Nasdaq: HPOL), Goldman Sachs
and Nielsen//NetRatings (Nasdaq: NTRT).
The eSpending report, which covers an eight-week period in
November and December, appears to mark the end of strong growth
years for e-commerce.
But it also comes amid lowered expectations and some
forecasts of flat growth, said Lori Iventosh-James, director
of e-commerce research at Harris Interactive.
"It's not a bad number, but it's nowhere near the growth of last year
or the year before," Iventosh-James told the E-Commerce Times.
"People pulled back on spending overall and at the same time, the
growth of online spending has started to reach the saturation point."
Traffic Counts
The upbeat spending report also came just after Jupiter Media
Metrix (Nasdaq: JMXI) reported a 50 percent surge
from 2000 to 2001 in the number of visitors to online shopping sites.
And several individual Web properties, including Yahoo! (Nasdaq: YHOO)
and AOL have reported strong shopping seasons of their own.
Bigger Chunk
The eSpending report, which uses a weekly survey of 36,000 consumers
to make projections, found that the percentage of overall spending
consumers did online inched up from 13 percent in 2000 to 15 percent.
While that is a step in the right direction, Iventosh-James said,
gaining a bigger share of each consumer's wallet is what e-commerce
has to focus on next.
"As the number of people going online starts to level off,
e-commerce has to take a bigger share of people's wallet," she said.
"Right now that's not really happening."
One challenge for e-commerce is that consumers in 2001
were clearly searching for bargains amid a slowing economy
and rising unemployment. Internet shoppers expect to be able to find
lower prices online, something that e-tailers have to reconcile
with the need to turn a profit.
Meanwhile, other growth potential lies in largely untapped
consumer segments, such as senior citizens and certain
minorities, Iventosh-James said.
Shopping Blitz
The eSpending report also highlights just how short the peak
e-commerce holiday season can be.
The research firms found that 65 percent of the total spending,
or about $9 billion, was spent during the last two weeks of November
and the first two weeks of December. Online spending peaked
during the week ending December 14th, when $2.6 billion
was spent. The percentage of Americans who made a purchase
online peaked the week before at 20 percent.
Spending also dropped off quickly during the third week of
December, a sign that many shoppers wanted to leave
ample time for shipping and delivery.
Mostly Happy
Most shoppers had good experiences buying online in 2001,
with 86 percent expressing satisfaction and 24 percent said they
had a better experience in 2001 than the year before.
"While 1999 was nearly a disaster for customer service online,
most major problems had been addressed in 2000," said Sean Kaldor,
vide president of analytical services at NetRatings. "With 15 percent
spending growth this year, etailers were well prepared and able to
deliver a consistent or even improved level of service."
Keeping customers will be even more important in years to
come, Kaldor said.
"The future of e-tailing will depend heavily upon how well
merchants are able to maintain this consistent satisfaction level
despite varying levels of spending growth and in the face of increasing
demands for profit," he said.