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Category: RetailPro

RetailPro

  • U.S. Online Retail Set For Double-Digit Growth

    Online retail in both the U.S. and Western Europe is set for a strong period of double-digit growth over the next five years, according to new forecasts by Forrester Research.

    U.S. online retail will grow at a 10 percent compound annual growth rate (CAGR) over the next five years to reach nearly $249 billion by 2014. Online retail within the largest European Union nations in Western Europe will grow at an 11 percent CAGR over the same period, hitting 114 billion by 2014.

    Sucharita Mulpuru
    Sucharita Mulpuru

    "Much of the overall retail sector’s growth in both the US and the EU over the next five years will come from the Internet," said Forrester Research Vice President and Principal Analyst Sucharita Mulpuru.

    "To maximize that growth, eBusiness professionals will have to help enable a multichannel strategy that responds to consumers’ increased desire to hop between the offline and online worlds and their increasing mobile and social behaviors. The retail innovators over the next five years will demonstrate customer enablement across all touchpoints, not just via a PC-based Web browser."

    Despite consumers’ increasing use of the Internet to research products before purchasing, most retailers fall short on offering a consistent cross-channel experience. According to Forrester’s data, while 82 percent of U.S. online consumers are satisfied with buying experiences that began and ended in a store, satisfaction drops to 61 percent for consumers who began their research online and purchased in a store.

    Highlights from the report include:

    *In the US, Web shopping will account for 8 percent of total retail sales by 2014.

    *Three product categories dominate online retail: apparel, footwear, and accessories; consumer electronics; and consumer hardware, software, and peripherals. Together, those categories represent more than 40 percent of total online retail sales in the US.

    *By 2014, 53 percent of total retail sales in the US will be influenced by eCommerce as consumers increasingly use the Internet to research products before purchasing.

     

     

  • Online Book Piracy Nearing $3 Billion

    Online Book Piracy Nearing $3 Billion

    Publishers could be losing between $2.75- 3 billion due to online book piracy, according to a new report from Attributor.

    Attributor’s FairShare Guardian service monitored 913 popular books in 14 categories in the fourth quarter of 2009.  FairShare tracked the number of successful downloads completed for each of the 913 titles on four file sharing sites that make download data available (4shared.com, scribd.com, wattpad.com and docstoc.com). Across those four sites, a total of 3.2 million downloads took place.

    Across the top 25 one-click hosting sites a total download figure of over 9 million copies was projected with an estimated loss of $380 million. Each book’s retail price and category information was collected from Amazon.com.

    Sales-Lost

    Among the 14 book categories tracked, piracy was most common in the business and investing category with an average of 13,000 free downloads per title. The professional and technical category trailed followed by science, computer and Internet.

    The 913 titles in this study represents works from publishers totaling 13.5 percent of the U.S. book publishing market. Projecting the $380 million value to the entire industry results in total potential piracy of $2.8 billion.
     

    Related Articles:

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    >Streaming Music Turning Users Away From Music

    >French Lawmakers Take Up Revised Internet Piracy Bill

     

  • Microsoft Releases Pricing Details For Office 2010

    Microsoft said today it is releasing pricing details for its Office 2010 editions launching later this year.

    "Office 2010 will be offered in four versions, to make it easier to choose a version of Office that’s best for you – Office Home and Business, Office Professional, Office Home and Student, and Office Professional Academic," Microsoft said in a blog post.

    Office Home and Student will be available for $149, Office Home and Business will cost $279, Office Professional will sell for $499 and Office Professional Academic will retail for $99.

     

    Office-2010

    Microsoft is also offering Product Key Cards for Office 2010, which are single license cards (with no DVD media) that will allow users to access Office 2010 on new PCs that have been pre-loaded with Office 2010. The Product Key Cards will be available at most major retailers.

    "Office Home and Student boxed product is available in a Family Pack, allowing usage on three PCs in one house," Microsoft said.

    "Purchase rights for Office Home and Business, Office Professional, and Office Professional Academic boxed product allow for usage on two of your PCs. The Product Key Card is valid for a single installation of the product."
     

     

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