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To: Calvin who wrote (142524)9/22/1999 9:02:00 AM
From: Calvin  Read Replies (1) of 176387
 
GartnerGroup's Dataquest Says Online Holiday Shopping to Nearly Triple This Year; Dataquest Projects 30 Percent of Sales to Occur Outside the United States

Business Wire/High-Tech Writers
SAN JOSE, Calif.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Sept. 22, 1999--Online retailers are already gearing up for a very happy holiday season, with worldwide electronic commerce this holiday season projected to surpass $12.2 billion, according to Dataquest Inc., a unit of Gartner Group, Inc. (NYSE:IT). In 1998, online shopping reached $4.5 billion.
The United States will dominate online holiday shopping with 70 percent of revenue. Europe is projected to account for 15.5 percent of revenue, while Asia/Pacific is forecast to have 7 percent of consumer electronic commerce this holiday season.
"While 1998 was the year that online shopping first rose to prominence in the United States, the 1999 holiday season is shaping up to be the launching point for an explosion of global consumer e-commerce," said Blaine Mathieu, senior industry analyst for Dataquest's e-Commerce Worldwide program.
"The mainstream is primed: extensive publicity of consumer e-commerce has significantly raised awareness of online shopping. Increased growth in PCs online and free Internet accounts will greatly increase the total available market of holiday shoppers, particularly outside the United States."
Dataquest analysts said new technologies will help ignite purchases on the Internet. More specific targeting initiatives to consumers will also spur revenue this year.
"The development of digital wallet and shopping agent technologies has intensified in anticipation of the holiday shopping season, making it even easier for shoppers to quickly locate and purchase desired items. Such technologies are finally being distributed widely to consumers by large financial institutions and credit card issuers," Mathieu said.
"Enough data has been gathered for marketers to truly begin engaging in the kind of targeted, one-to-one marketing that the Internet promises."
Another key to the success for Internet companies will be the lessons they learned from problems that occurred last year.
"Reformed by the breakdown of numerous logistical and distribution systems in 1998, most e-tailers have learned to scale their infrastructure to be able to handle the upcoming flood of online sales. This year, significant hiring and large expenditures on new infrastructure will better help companies meet consumer demand," Mathieu said.
The 1999 holiday shopping season is expected to be a major event for business-to-consumer electronic commerce. "Outside of North America, this promises to be the first big online season," Mathieu said.
"Within the U.S., many mainstream consumers will be making their first purchases online. In both cases, the future course of consumer e-commerce will be shaped by January, setting the stage for an incredible year 2000."
This information is produced by Dataquest's e-Commerce Services Worldwide program. This program provides both accomplished electronic commerce vendors and new or recent market entrants with in-depth research and analysis on the key opportunities, trends, end-use requirements, and major players in the market for electronic commerce.
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