Internet Psychologist Graham Jones
From the media? CLICK HERE FOR MY MEDIA INFORMATION

 

Search this site


 

Get these
articles sent
directly to you
each day

Your Email Address:

 

Convert this blog to a PDF file

RSS Feed RSS Subscribe

Add to Google

Add to My Yahoo

Subscribe in NewsGator Online

Add to My AOL

Subscribe in Bloglines

Add to Technorati Favorites

BRDTracker

Add to Pageflakes

http://www.wikio.com


Add To Google Toolbar

 

Previous Articles

Forget Google, think social


Internet generation may have poorer memories


Record breaking book shows content is easy to prod...


Where should you blog?


Young enterpreneur shows us how to run an online b...


Podcasting? That's old-fashioned - video is the on...


British supermarkets show small online retailers h...


Don't get too excited about the MySpace and Google...


Trust is a key issue in email marketing


Tricks or treats? How should you revive those emai...


 

Archives

 

Topics

Internet Marketing

Blogging

Social Networking

Internet Shopping

Online success

Internet Psychology

Future of the Internet

 

 

Your Free Guide
to Internet Success

 

Free Guide To Internet Success

 

Claim your free guide to success in the age of the Internet

 

Name

Email

 

 

 

Saturday, November 10, 2007

Guess where Internet shoppers come from...!

If you had to stick a pin in a map to show where most online shoppers come from, where would you place it? London? Birmingham? Manchester? Well, yes, they all have plenty of Internet shoppers. However, the part of the UK with the highest proportion of Internet shoppers is the South West region - mostly Devon and Cornwall.

Now why is that, you may ask. After all, Devon and Cornwall are two of the most economically deprived parts of the UK. The average age of the population is much higher than in other parts of the country, so you'd expect lower Internet usage anyway. So why is so much online shopping going on there?

Convenience. If you want to go shopping in Devon or Cornwall you face longer journeys to the shops than if you live in Central London, for instance. You also have less variety than you get in the major cities. It also costs more. In London many people can walk to the shops - in much of the South West you have to travel by car, increasing the costs of shopping in particular for people on a pension.

The Internet, on the other hand, is much more convenient and has more variety. So it's no surprise to find that in a similar way, online dating is most popular in Wales, where the population is low and the distance between people very high.

These two pieces of data are in a new survey from YouGov, published in a report just out. The study shows that the combination of distance to shops and the variety of shops available could well be impacting on decisions to shop online.

This means that emphasising convenience could be a good message for anyone running an online shop. It also means that targeting people in low population density areas may be more profitable than looking for the city traffic, because you get a higher proportion of buyers on those outlying areas.

Labels:


Add this story to:

| BlinkList | BlogMarks | del.icio.us | Digg | Furl | Google | LinkRoll | Lycos |

| ma.gnolia | Netscape | Newsvine | Ning | reddit | Simpy | Spurl | Squidoo | Wink |


Email this story to your friends:

 

Readers' Comments:

Post a Comment

 

 

Permalink: Guess where Internet shoppers come from...!