left
right
CHART CLOSE-UP FROM THE STORY:
Newspaper Ads Help Drive Consumers to the Web »
scroll down to read the full story
google-newspaper-ad-driven-purchases-by-venue.jpg

Newspaper Ads Help Drive Consumers to the Web

Some 44% of people who saw a product or service advertised in a newspaper in the past month researched it - and two-thirds (67%) of that group went online to find more information, according to a Google-commissioned survey from Clark, Martire & Bartolomeo.

google-newspaper-ad-research-online-response.jpg

The survey of 1,003 search-engine-using adults who also read newspapers (an estimated 82 million people in the US) finds that among those who go online to research a product, nearly half (47%) go directly to a product URL, 31% go to a search engine, and 22% go to another site:

google-newspaper-ad-response-paths.jpg

Some additional findings from the study, below.

Effect on Purchasing

Some 42% of respondents reported that in the last month they purchased at least one product they had seen in the newspaper.

Most of them (83%) purchased at least one thing from a store or dealer; the second most common purchase venue was online (38%):

google-newspaper-ad-driven-purchases-by-venue.jpg

Among those who go online after seeing ads in newspapers, nearly 70% make purchases following their additional research.

Multi-channel Ads Increase Trust/Likelihood to Buy

Seeing products and services advertised in multiple channels increased both consumer trust in them and likelihood to buy.

Nearly half of respondents (48%) said seeing a product in the newspaper after seeing it online would make them trust the product more. More than half that group (52%) said they would be more likely to purchase the product if they saw a newspaper ad for a product they already knew about from the internet.

When rating which media are better for different functions, respondents considered the newspaper more useful for learning about promotions (68% - vs. 42% for the internet) and deciding where (54% v. 45%) and when (43% v. 30%) to buy:

google-newspaper-online-ad-effectiveness-by-task.jpg

About the survey: In mid-2007, Google commissioned Clark, Martire & Bartolomeo to conduct a study of American print newspaper readers with the goal of gathering data that explored how newspaper readers respond to newspaper ads by going online. The survey was based on a random digit dialing telephone sample of 1,003 target adults. Target adults were regular print newspaper readers who use the Internet, and search engines, at least once a month.

TODAY'S MARKETINGCHARTS STORIES

Consumers Favor Cheaper Liquor

U.S. consumers consumed a slightly higher quantity of liquor in 2009 as 2008, but traded down on quality,...

Bud, ETrade Score Big in Super Bowl Ads

Budweiser and ETrade were the big winners among TV advertisers in the 2010 Super Bowl, according to an...

Motorola Maintains Mobile Subscriber Market Share Lead

Despite a slight dip in its market share percentage, Motorola still led all mobile OEMs in U.S. subscriber...

North American Email Has High Failure Rate

Twenty percent of email in the U.S. and Canada is not making it to the inbox, according to...

Top 10 Online Retailers by Conversion Rate - December 2009

...

Green Marketing Study - Click Here!
advertisement