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News
JupiterResearch finds Europeans Now Spend More Time
Online than Reading Newspapers and Magazines (31/10/2006)
Time Spent Online Has Doubled Since 2003
JupiterResearch, a leading authority on the
impact of the Internet and emerging consumer technologies on business,
reveals that European Internet users' time spent online has surpassed
that spent reading newspapers and magazines. According to a new
JupiterResearch report, "European Media Consumption Consumer Survey
2006," European Internet users now spend an average of four hours
per week online, compared to just two hours in 2003. Time spent
on newspapers and magazines is just three hours. This trend has
helped drive an increase in overall media consumption to 19 hours
per week, up from 15 hours in 2003. TV continues to dominate media
consumption with Europeans spending three times as much time watching
TV as going online.
"The fact that Internet consumption has passed
print consumption is an important landmark for the establishment
of the Internet in the European media mix," says Mark Mulligan,
Vice President & Research Director at JupiterResearch. "This shift
in the balance of power will increasingly shape content distribution
strategies, advertising spend allocation and communication strategies
in the European arena."
European media consumption trends are underpinned
by two key factors: age and broadband access. Younger consumers
exhibit a propensity to consume media online whereas older consumers
lean more towards traditional print media. The strong growth of
broadband has been key in shaping the media consumption landscape:
broadband users spend more than three times as many hours a week
online than dial-up users. The impact of broadband is also seen
at a country level: France, which has the highest rates of broadband
household access, also registers the highest average hours spent
online whereas Germany ranks lowest on both metrics.
www.jupiterresearch.com
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