The internet has almost doubled the influence of television in consumer decision-making in the U.K., Germany and France, according to the Digital Influence Index (DII), a study of media consumption and online behaviors conducted by Fleishman-Hillard and Harris Interactive, writes MarketingCharts.
In all three countries the internet ranks as the most influential medium among internet users, with index scores of 44 percent in the U.K., 45 percent in Germany, and 46 percent in France (see charts) - or roughly twice the influence of the second-strongest channel, television, and about eight times the influence of printed media, according to the index.
In the U.K., 66 percent of online consumers say the internet helps them make better decisions (vs. 71 percent and 50 percent for Germany and France, respectively) - see chart.
However, just 28 percent (vs. 32 percent and 28 percent for Germany and France, respectively) trust the information on the internet provided by companies (view chart).
Consumers in all three countries are more likely to seek others’ opinions, through social media and product-rating sites, for making personal decisions (e.g., healthcare options or major electronics purchases). In contrast, they use company-controlled sources when making transactional decisions on commoditized items, such as utilities or airline tickets.
Other findings on consumers’ research use of the internet (see chart):
Consumers are the most engaged in digital communications in France, where two-thirds of web users own a webcam and three-fourths use instant messaging. U.K. consumers are the most likely to have created an online profile site on a social networking page, and Germans are more likely to have used the internet for research.
Country-specific differences:
“The research shows that the internet stands out as the most important communications medium in the lives of European consumers today”, said Dave Senay, president and chief executive officer of Fleishman-Hillard.
“The rapid rise, changing nature, and increasing influence of the internet, in particular, should cause marketers to think differently about the entire media and marketing landscape,” said George Terhanian, president of Harris Interactive Europe.
Note: All charts courtesy of Fleishman-Hillard and Harris Interactive.
About the research: The DII was designed to measure media-consumption patterns, internet behavior and attitudes, and online social networking involvement, as well as to assess the internet’s influence on specific decisions in the areas of purchasing, politics, healthcare and finance. Fleishman-Hillard and Harris Interactive interviewed 4,921 internet users in the UK, Germany and France between December 2007 and January 2008. The data was quota sampled and then weighted using a bias correction method called Propensity Scoring to ensure a representative sample of internet users across each country.
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