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To: Chuck Rubin who wrote (993)12/6/1998 5:24:00 AM
From: Norms  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 2585
 
While the following post deals with internet buying over the holidays, it clearly shows the power and draw of the internet. This is great for each and every business that's internet related.

I'm sure we will see more related stories about online gambling shortly. I also expect we will see a PR this week highlighting the vast interest, hits and money spent on wagering as a result of the media blitz. We're looking good.

Taken from Computer World!

Holiday shoppers crush online stores
By Sharon Machlis

For Internet retailers dreaming of a green Christmas, early reports are showing that their holiday wishes may
come true.

"It's blowing our doors off," said Russ Gillam, vice president of electronic commerce at Buena Vista Internet
Group, the corporate division that manages The Walt Disney Co.'s online store.

The Friday through Sunday period after Thanksgiving turned in the three biggest revenue days ever at Disney
Online -- "many times bigger" than last year, Gillam said. The Burbank, Calif., company will not reveal
specific figures.

Even more encouraging: Disney's all-important "conversion rate," which measures how many of a site's
window-shoppers actually buy something, is up 65% to 70% above last year.

At Eddie Bauer Inc., revenue rose almost 300% last week compared with last year.

While there wasn't much extra Web buying last year on so-called "Black Friday," the big shopping day after
Thanksgiving, "this year, we saw a really huge spike in our business," said Judy Neuman, vice president of
interactive media at the Redmond, Wash.-based retailer. "Friday was a great surprise."

Meanwhile, leading Internet bookseller Amazon.com reported holdiday weekend sales grew fourfold.

Forrester Research Inc. in Cambridge, Mass., now predicts that online retail sales for all of this year will hit
$7.8 billion and soar to $108 billion by 2003 -- rising 69% a year. That $108 billion would represent about 6%
of the U.S. retail industry.