By Clare Saliba E-Commerce Times
02/14/01 12:21 PM PT
Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos has faced a firestorm of criticism of late, but the company is many times ahead of its competitors.
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Amazon.com remained the top online retailer
in January with roughly 2.3 million projected buyers -- more than three
times that of nearest competitor Barnesandnoble.com -- according to a report released
Wednesday by market research firm PC
Data.
While Amazon also managed to double the number of shoppers it registered in
January 2000, the figure was half of the company's peak activity in December.
The study found, however, that the drop was symptomatic of the wider slide in
online buying following the crush of the holiday shopping season.
Coming in a distant second on PC Data's list of the top 20 e-tailers was
Barnesandnoble.com, with 638,000 projected buyers for the month. Like Amazon,
the number was almost double from January 2000, but down from its
December high.
Last week, Barnesandnoble.com posted a fourth-quarter loss of
US$143.5 million, significantly greater than its loss of $38.3
million in the same period a year earlier. The company
also announced plans to cut 350 jobs, or 16 percent of its workforce.
The Amazing Retailer
The strong January showing should come as a welcome
dose of good news for Amazon. The Seattle, Washington-based Internet
bellwether has spent the past couple of weeks trying to
emerge from the shadows of its largest layoffs to date.
In addition to the
layoffs, the company has slashed its sales forecasts and is facing
questions about its decision to start chasing earnings instead of further expansion.
Amazon has said that it expects to reach operating
profitability by the end of 2001, driven in part by increases in its
customer base. The company added nearly 13 million new customers last year.
"Remove Amazon.com from the equation and you had a very tight, competitive
marketplace in January among top e-tail sites," said PC Data director of
research and analysis John Megahed.
Next in Line
Rounding out the top five top e-tailers were Ticketmaster.com with 636,000
projected buyers, Half.com with 567,000 projected buyers and JCPenney.com
with 545,000 projected buyers.
The newcomer on PC Data's list was ShopIntuit.com, which sells popular
financial management software such as Turbo Tax. ShopIntuit.com claimed the
No. 9 spot with 245,000 projected buyers in January.
"The emergence of Quicken's ShopIntuit.com among the top 10 demonstrates
that there is room on the Web for new e-commerce faces, especially in light
of demand for a popular, seasonal product," said Megahed.
Indeed, a study released earlier this week by Forrester Research projected
that 6 million U.S. households will prepare tax returns online this year,
up from 2 million last year. The report attributed the forecasted increase
to a combination of better online tax and financial service offerings and
the growing comfort level of online users toward electronically assisted tax
preparation.
Jumping Ahead
PC Data also said that a number of e-tailers made "impressive jumps" into
January's Top 20 list, including Staples.com at No. 12, up from No. 30 last
month with 186,000 projected buyers.
Another gainer was CyberRebate.com, which came in at No. 13, up from No. 24,
with 185,000 projected buyers. Victoriasecret.com also did well, hitting the
No. 17 spot, up from No. 34, with 133,000 projected buyers.
To compile its data, PC Data Online tracked unique visitors to the top 20
e-tail sites through software based on buying activity and traffic from more
than 120,000 U.S. home Internet users. The research firm
did not include shopping domains
that provide free downloads, product reviews or purchasing incentives, or
other types of e-commerce sites, such as auction, travel reservation or
financial service sites.
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