The order has remained fairly consistent over time. The percentages have varied:
Rank Category
1. Travel
2. Computer hardware
3. Office
4. Consumer electronics
5. Books
6. Event tickets
7. Home and garden
8. Health and beauty
9. Sport and fitness
10. Movies and video
Would everyone trend to agree with this for the UK market.
Suggestions welcomed.
There are a lot of big markets out there but too with plenty of competition.
A few other big markets:
Travel
Finance - Credit Cards, Mortgages & Loans
Insurance
Cars
Software
It goes to show that what people are really searching the Internet for. What happened to the Internet being a source of useful (and useless) information? These days its for the bargain hunters.
Of course I'm just speaking in general going off the stats I have seen in my time as a marketer, there are generally loadsa loadsa people out there searching for information too ;)
Terry
After Operation Ore, you would be crazy to give your credit card number to any adult networks, just in case they are involved in anything dodgy. If they get done for making or distributing paedophilia, every person who has *ever* given them a credit card number will be investigated, have their computer equipment seized and their house searched. The slightest hint of child pictures and you will be prosecuted. It happened to 7000 people in the UK last time.
I would have thought that would put a few people off paying ;-)
glad i never did that then.
But very guilty for the following starting with what costs me the most per year.
Computer Hardware - £8K a year
Software - £3K a year
plane tickets - £1.5K
hotels - £2K
music - £1.5K
books - £1K
dating agency memberships (new to me - nice women though) - not much
I have never bought anything else online, i.e. pills, adult, gambling, finance, etc.
One thing that no one has mentioned which is surprising is PPC/PFI and paid directory listings - that has got to be the biggest by far, for all the companies. I actually have a nominal code in our accounts for expenditure for web-advertising expenditure.
I would never buy a house off the web, but we have been using it extensively for research, and have found several that we wouldn't have just using local estate agents. Property is also one of the most searched for topics on the stuff that I run, especially now and last month. Just because you can't add a house to your shopping basket doesn't mean that a lot of money involved.
The same goes for cars and family holidays. Lots of research on the web leading to sales off line.
The first one said something about:
85% of people looking to buy a house, look on the net first to find it.
The second said:
25% of people who bought a house, visited it online the first time.
Leo
I would give them a wide berth :-)
They mean that of the 100% of people looking to buy a house ... 85% look on the net first ..
and yet when they get to this great estate agent or their pals ... only 25% of those that complete and actually manage to buy a house started by looking on the net ... thats a lot of people looking to buy a house that despite the estate agents attempts online and offline .. just dont buy a house ...
And these are qualified prospects .. who want to buy a house ... "people looking to buy a house" you said....
Hmm .. statistics :-)
The 25% [b]visited[b] the house online, so I assume they are talking about video of the house or something similar.
I will go down to the estate agent next week and write the stats down to make sure I've got them right ;)
Leo