Welcome to WebProNews Breaking eBusiness and Search News
Advertise | Newsletter | Sitemap | News Feeds News Feed 
 WebProNews Search Part of the iEntry network iEntry inc. 

Advertisers Neglecting New King Of All Media

Jason Lee Miller
Staff Writer
Published: 2006-06-06

WebProNews RSS Feed


The Web as an advertising medium is vastly underexploited in light of a unique new study revealing that Web usage dominates all other media in daily use. Additionally, the study found, chronic Web surfers tend to spend more freely than TV watchers.

The research, commissioned by the Online Publishers Association and conducted by Ball State University's Center for Media Design, tracked real-time media use of 350 people, recording their media interaction four times per minute. The results reveal the Web as a dominant force in media consumption as the only medium that ranks in the top two at both work and home. Predictably, Web use at work crushes television consumption, with a 54.6% reach, compared to television's 21.1%.

"Industry data shows that the Web takes up between 20 and 25 percent of consumers' overall media time, but attracts about 8 percent of advertising dollars," said Pam Horan, OPA president.

"While advertisers have been steadily moving to the Web in recent years, this research indicates the shift should be on a much faster pace. As a mass media with a powerful ability to extend the impact of all media, the Web clearly offers tremendous untapped advertising opportunities."

Not only does the Web offer the targeted saturation marketers are looking for, but complements other media as surfers often open up a browser while watching television or listening to radio. The research found that the Web increased the reach of television by 51 percent in the morning, 39 percent in the middle of the day, and 42 percent in the afternoon. Magazines, though, enjoyed the greatest benefits, as the Web more than doubles their reach.

"Based on our real-world observations, it is clear that consumers are consistently online even while they're watching TV or listening to the radio," said Horan. "This unique attribute of Web usage means that advertising messages receive a dramatic boost when online is part of the buy."

The findings that consumers are often double-dipping into the media pool jive with an earlier BSU study exploring the impact of two-screen gaming (interaction between television programming and supplemental Web activities). In that study, a TV-to-Web experience was regarded as a positive one for participants, who were also more likely to be paying attention to interactive commercials. Rewards like coupons or discounts (or larger prizes) increased participation.

Couple the fact that broadband is driving dramatic increases in daily (as in "all day," not "once a day") online activity with the fact that there are often two media complementing and supplementing each other, and one will conclude that the advertising industry is missing the boat into a huge sea of opportunity. They do this by not only neglecting Web advertising, but not looking more into interactive media messages.

If overspending for traditional media ad placement (or maybe "misallocation" is better than "overspending") were not enough to convince the marketer, then the next revelation may be. In what the researchers called "a final key finding," Web users tend to have greater buying power than television users.

Participants identified as heavy TV users had annual retail spending of $21,401, while the Web dominant group spent $26,450 on average - nearly a quarter more. In entertainment and recreation categories, the TV group spent $2,626, compared to $3,281 from the Web group, also 25% more.

"Getting a real-world look at how much consumers rely on the Web and on television allowed us to make important conclusions about spending power," Horan said. "Whether they're headed to the store for new clothes or planning a vacation, heavy Web users simply spend more money. In a wide range of spending categories, heavy Web users are more affluent and spend more than their television-centric counterparts."


|


Drag this to your Bookmarks.

Add to DiggThis Yahoo My Web



Receive Our Daily Email of Breaking eBusiness News


About the Author:
Jason L. Miller is a staff writer for WebProNews covering technology and business.

WebProNews RSS Feed

More Top News Articles

Contact WebProNews
Advertisement





TOP NEWS

Targeted Information for Business
WebProNews is part of the iEntry network

Internet Business: Marketing: Small Business:
WebProNews MarketingNewz SmallBusinessNewz
WebProWorld AdvertisingDay PromoteNews
EcommNewz SalesNewz EntrepreneurNewz

Software: Search Engines: Web Design:
WebMasterFree Jayde B2B DesignNewz
NetworkingFiles SearchZA FlashNewz
SecurityConfig SearchNewz WebSiteNotes

Developer: IT Management: Security:
DevWebPro ITManagement SecurityProNews
DevNewz SysAdminNews SecurityConfig
TheDevWeb NetworkingFiles NetworkNewz

The iEntry Network consists of over 100 web publications reaching millions of Internet Professionals. Contact us to advertise.
eBUSINESS RESOURCES






 Advertise | Contact Us | Corporate | Newsletter | Sitemap | Submit an Article | News Feeds
 WebProNews is an iEntry, Inc. ® publication - 1998-2009 All Rights Reserved
About WebProNews
WebProNews is the number one source for eBusiness News. Over 5 million eBusiness professionals read WebProNews and other iEntry business and tech publications.

WebProNews provides real-time coverage of internet business.

Free Email Newsletters:
WebProNews SearchNewz
WebProWorld DevWebPro
Marketing SecurityNews
Plus over 100 other newsletters!

Send me relevant info on products and services.


WebProWorld
Ten most recent posts.

NetworkingFiles
Featured Software

WebProNews in the News
View all recent mentions of WebProNews from around the world!

Recent Articles On ...
Google eBusiness
Yahoo Ask Jeeves
MSN Blogs
Search Engines Blogging
Affiliate Programs Marketing
eCommerce Advertising
eBay Sun Microsystems
AOL Adsense
Microsoft Adwords
Oracle IBM
Amazon Apple
SEM Mac
SEO iPod
Adsense XBox
PR Adobe



iEntry.com WebProWorld RSS Feed WebProWorld Contact WebProNews Print Version Email a friend Bookmark us