Online holiday sales slow down

By
13 October 2000 03:00 PM
Tags: traffic, site, shop, online, stores, holiday season, week, visitor
It looks like the online shopping spree may be over -- at least for the holiday season.

New data from Nielsen/NetRatings shows that traffic to e-commerce sites has tapered off since Dec. 12, indicating that shoppers have either finished their present-buying or resorted to the real world in their quest for last-minute gifts.

The highest traffic day this holiday season was December 12. During that week, more than 17 million unique visitors went to ecommerce sites. That figure dropped 3.8 percent the following week to 16.4 million people.

Delivery times were a likely cause for the early peak in Web shopping. Many sites stopped guaranteeing Christmas delivery around the middle of the month.

"Cybershoppers in 1999 tend not to be huge procrastinators," NetRatings director Peggy O'Neill said in a release.

Computer store traffic increases
While traffic to computer hardware stores, auction sites, and comparison shopping sites rose, online toy stores and malls saw their customer volumes decrease, the study found.

And O'Neill noted that some of the traffic to computer stores might have been from consumers looking for Y2K information.

Holiday shoppers are expected to spend around $6 billion online, according to Jupiter Communications, almost double the amount they spent online last year. While most companies have yet to release sales figures, judging by traffic, Amazon.com appears to be the big winner. The online retailer has topped Media Metrix' rankings of e-commerce sites each week since Thanksgiving, and has pulled in more than 5.7 million unique visitors between November 22 and December 12.

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