TV Impact on Product Awareness Diminishes; Interactive Marketing a Growing Influence on Further Learning and Purchase Decision.
DoubleClick Inc.
(Nasdaq: DCLK), the leading provider of marketing tools for advertisers,
direct marketers and web publishers, today announced the results of its second
annual Touchpoints Survey at the company's Insight 2004 Annual Conference.
The survey examines the different channels used to reach consumers and
analyzes their influence, across categories, at different stages of the
purchase process. Overall, the study concludes that broadcast media leads in
creating awareness for only half of the categories surveyed, and online
marketing and websites are having a dramatic impact on the further learning
and purchase decision phases of the purchase process.
"The Touchpoints survey results show that different product categories
require tailored marketing tactics, although it's becoming clearer that very
few product categories are immune to online sales" said Doug Knopper, Senior
Vice President and General Manager of Online Advertising at DoubleClick.
"While TV still impacts awareness, the influence of interactive marketing --
including advertising, search, and email -- is chipping away that share. For
example, for the first time we see Internet ads driving awareness in
categories such as personal finance. In addition, online continues to have a
profound impact on the further learn and purchase decision phases across most
categories."
As part of the survey, DoubleClick asked consumers about their purchases
within the last six months in the following ten categories: Auto, Electronics,
Food, Health & Beauty, Mortgages/Investments and Credit Cards/Retail Banking,
Movies, Prescription Drugs, Telecom Services, Personal/Household Care (to
reflect packaged goods) and House & Home (furniture, appliances and home
decor). The survey examined the sequence of how consumers first learn about
products in these categories, how they further learn about them and which
factor most influenced their purchase decision.
TV's Influence on Awareness Decreases
Television dominates only 5 of 10 categories as the media with the most
influence on the First Learn or Awareness phase of the purchase process.
Awareness for Travel is driven by travel websites, Credit Cards/Retail Banking
by direct mail, Mortgages/Investments by Internet ads, and Personal/Household
Care and Home Products by print. Notably, the influence of television declined
significantly in the past year in categories like movies, automotive and
electronics.
Online Plays Major Role in Further Learn/Purchase Decision
The role of websites and online marketing has significant influence in
driving the Further Learn and Purchase Decision phases for Auto, Electronics,
Home Products, Prescription Drugs, Movies, Travel and Telecom (more commonly
purchased goods, such as those in the Personal/Household Care category
continue to be more influenced by TV and print).
Degree of Influence: Websites Often Match or Outrank Broadcast and Print Media
This year's survey asked respondents to rank the influence of various
factors on the purchase process to develop a picture of relative impact. All
answers were ranked on a scale of 1 to 7, with 7 being highest. Again, online
showed enormous influence across many categories.
For example, in Mortgages/Investments, news and financial sites have
greatest impact, ranking at 4.5, closely followed by company websites at 4.3.
For Telecommunications, company websites outranked any other media form at
3.5, followed by TV ads at 3.3. Where does TV still outrank online? The Movie
category, for one, is still largely driven by TV ads, ranking at 5.0. But
online movie reviews have a similar impact to newspaper ads: they each rank
2.7.
The Influence of Search Engine Marketing
Search engine marketing is increasing in impact but its influence varies
by category. It is an important factor in more complicated purchase
categories, such as consumer electronics and prescription drugs. For example,
53% of survey respondents say that search is how they found websites for
Prescription Drugs, versus only 7% who guessed the URL. However, search is
used less often in Telecom, a category with a small number of high-awareness
brands: 38% used a search engine while 36% guessed the URL.
Permission-Based Email Here to Stay
Overall, nearly half of consumers who had made a purchase reported
interest in or are already receiving email updates about those
products/services. Across categories, 54% of consumers who visited a corporate
website requested more information, 32% by email, 16% by email and mail, and
only 6% preferring the information solely by mail. Overall, permission-based
email has achieved high levels of penetration in categories like Travel,
Credit Cards/Retail Banking, Mortgages/Investments, but still shows great
potential in other categories, especially Auto, Personal/Household Care and
Electronics.
Death of a Salesman?
There is a direct correlation between the growth in usage of the Internet
for the research phase of the purchase process and the decline in impact of
the salesperson. For all categories surveyed, on average, nearly 40% said the
Internet had decreased their reliance on some sort of intermediary, whether it
was a broker or an in-store salesperson.
Methodology
Working with Beyond Interactive/Grey Worldwide and using the Greenfield
Online panel, DoubleClick first developed the Touchpoints study in 2002 by
breaking the purchase process into three distinct phases: First Learn
(awareness), Further Learn (research/information gathering), and Purchase
Decision (most influence). The study was fielded for the second time in
December of 2003 with a total of 2,000 completed surveys with a minimum of 200
per product category. There was an even split of adult male and female
respondents.
An executive summary of the findings is available at Double Click.
About DoubleClick Inc.
DoubleClick is the leading provider of tools for advertisers, direct
marketers and web publishers to plan, execute and analyze their marketing
programs. DoubleClick's online advertising, email marketing and database
marketing solutions help clients yield the highest return on their marketing
dollar. In addition, the company's marketing analytics tools help clients
measure performance within and across channels. DoubleClick Inc. has global
headquarters in New York City and maintains 19 offices around the world.
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