Study: People more canny at coping with spam

E-mail users are getting smarter when it comes to fighting spam.

The number of consumers deleting junk e-mail without reading it has climbed to 65 percent from last year's 60 percent. Only 4 percent bothered to read spam to see if it was of any use, compared with 5 percent in 2002, and 18 percent the year before, according to a study.

Results of the study, released Monday by DoubleClick, a N.Y.-based provider of tools for the online marketing industry, are based on a survey of 1,000 consumers who use e-mail at least once a week.

Unsolicited e-mails account for a third of the total mail traffic on the Internet. Spam-clogged e-mail boxes are creating headaches for system administrators as well as for home users.

But DoubleClick said it is not yet time to write off e-mail as a marketing channel because consumers are accepting legitimate commercial messages in their in-boxes and making purchases based on them.

"The encouraging news from this year's study is that consumers are clearly differentiating between spam and legitimate commercial e-mail," Scott Knoll, vice president of DoubleClick's Marketer Solutions Division, said in a statement.

A majority (91percent) of consumers said they receive special online offers from merchants, retailers and cataloguers that they have permitted to send messages. More than 63 percent of respondents said they look at the sender's name to distinguish a genuine business offer from spam, an improvement over last year's 59.9 percent.

The study showed that the mention of a discount offer in the subject line entices more people to open such messages and often results in a sale. Sixty five percent of those surveyed made a purchase as a result of an e-mail offer from an online seller or a retail store.

The average volume of e-mail messages per week rose slightly, to 264 from last year's 254, with the ratio of spam (56 percent) unchanged. DoubleClick also said that consumers are using different methods to deal with spam--ranging from using bulk folders to creating alternative e-mail addresses for online buying.

Advertisement

Talkback 0 comments

Latest Videos

Sponsored content

Power Centre - Content from our premier sponsors

Blogs

  • Renai LeMay How reliable is IP telephony?
    Have you ever heard a weird kind of hissing, crackling or popping noise when calling someone on an IP telephony line? How rare is the phenomenon these days?
  • Array Forget the NBN, 100Mbps is already here
    Telstra and TransACT will shortly begin offering 100Mbps broadband to many customers. By moving early, the companies have not only raised the bar for Australia's broadband services, but thrown down a challenge to a government that now faces increased pressure to deliver the NBN as promised.
  • Array IT: Govt's cost-cutting bitch
    The government needs to stop looking at IT as a necessary evil or the place to remove costs when the Treasurer comes calling.
  • More blogs »

Tags

Back to top

Featured