By Michael Mahoney E-Commerce Times
06/20/01 4:57 PM PT
According to a new report, Web surfers in the UK do not spend a lot of time on the
Net and few consider online shopping a favorite activity.
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Despite the fact that more people in the UK are shopping over the Internet
than ever before, a report released Tuesday by
Which? Online and the
UK Consumers' Association reveals several potential warning signs for
British e-tailers.
According to the report, 63 percent of British Internet
users venture online for less than five hours per week, and 2 percent
of surfers said shopping was their favorite use of the Net.
"While the total number of shoppers has increased, the percentage of the
Internet population who shop online has remained broadly the same," said
Paul Kitchen, the author of the report and head of Which? Online.
In addition, the study found that over one third of the entire British population has
no intention of ever going online, and one in 10 Internet users in the UK
thinks that shopping online results in better customer service.
The study was published by Which? Online, a subsidiary of the Consumers'
Association, an independent organization founded in 1957 that conducts
comparative testing of consumer products and trends.
Leaving E-Mail Behind
Further signs of the UK's apparent disinterest with the Internet came up in the
area of e-mail usage. According to the report, 5 percent of
surfers chose e-mail as their preferred means of communication, down from
14 percent in the 1999.
"The survey indicates that the public are beginning to reject newer methods
of communication," Kitchen said. "Other methods of communication, such as
text messaging via mobile phones, may offer a more convenient way of staying
in touch for some."
In addition, 67 percent of the report's respondents said they prefer
communicating in a face-to-face meeting, up dramatically from 39 percent in
1999.
Branching Out
The news from the report was not all grim. Almost 8 million people in the
UK have now shopped online, more than ever before. Thirteen percent of them
have now made a purchase from a product category other than books, CDs and
software.
Although books are still the most popular online purchase, the travel category
finished ahead of CDs and videos to move into second place.
Waiting for Old-Timers
In the long term, it is the length of UK user experience that will ultimately
make the difference, the report said. According to Which? Online, the more a person shops,
the less he or she worries about security issues.
More than half of non-shoppers had
online security fears, compared to 28 percent of those who do shop online.
"As the UK user base becomes more experienced -- 45 percent have now been
online for more than two years -- we'll see an increase in time online per
week, the number of sites visited and number of online shopping
transactions," Kitchen said.
Are there are organisations (i.e. government) that are trying to educate the older population to ...
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