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PhoCusWright Survey Reveals 21 Million Americans Bought
Travel Online in 2000
PHOENIX--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Nov. 15, 2000--
Results from The PhoCusWright Travel E-Commerce Survey Detail Explosive
Industry Growth and Outline Future Challenges for the Internet Travel
Business

The number of Americans who bought travel online last year
grew to 21 million people, nearly doubling the Internet travel market for
the second consecutive year, according to The PhoCusWright 2000 Travel
E-Commerce Survey. PhoCusWright, Inc., the leading independent Internet
travel intelligence company, today unveiled the results from its third
annual research survey that takes an in-depth look at the customer
experience. The survey findings help determine what makes shoppers choose
one service over another when it comes to buying travel online; which
features make them most likely to return; and what, if anything, inspires
loyalty.
"Despite all the recent talk of `easy dot-com, easy
dot go,' it's amazing that online travel buying has been embraced by
one-tenth of the adult population," said Philip Wolf, president and CEO
of PhoCusWright, Inc. "Consumers continue to defy the skeptics with an
insatiable appetite for anything and everything online travel."
Online travelers who rely solely on the Internet for
travel purchases cite cost savings as the determining factor. Thus, the
perception that online travel agents offer the best price is an overwhelming
advantage for these retailers. Fifty-four percent of online travelers say
price is the most important factor in buying travel through this channel,
followed by
reliability (20 percent), ease-of-use (16 percent) and
customer service (9 percent).
According to
PhoCusWright, objections to travel e-commerce
are disappearing, as online travelers become more comfortable with Internet
purchasing. Seventy-five percent of those surveyed have bought some product
online, up sharply from 44 percent in 1998. Most critically, the rise in
travel e-commerce does not simply represent one-time customer usage:
millions of buyers keep coming back for more.
"The challenge is not finding new users - 10 million
Americans bought travel online for the first time this year," said
Lorraine Sileo, vice president of information services at PhoCusWright, Inc.
"The challenge is keeping online buyers as loyal customers." Other
key results include:
-- Of the 21 million online travel buyers in 2000, seven
million of them now buy travel exclusively online.
-- Online travelers who usually buy their personal travel
online have grown from 10 percent in 1998 to 27 percent today - now 13
million individuals.
-- Online travel buyers take more trips on average than
non-buyers - 5.8 vs. 3.6. They take more business trips (3.6 compared to
2.0) and more personal trips (2.3 vs. 1.6).
-- Online travel sites have moved into first place as the
research tool of choice for leisure travelers. Forty-four percent use one or
more travel-specific Web sites when researching personal travel, up sharply
from 28% in 1999.
-- Ninety-one percent of online travel buyers say they
picked the main online travel service they've used because "it seems to
have good prices." Ease of use ranked second at 80%.
The PhoCusWright survey was conducted by telephone among a
random sample of Americans across the country. More than 10,000 individuals
were contacted to obtain a sample of 505 "online travelers" -
Americans who've flown via commercial carrier in the last year and used the
Internet in the last month. This study was conducted for PhoCusWright by ICR-International
Communications Research (ICR) of Media, PA.
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