19 de julho de 2008

Brasil on-line: comprando mais do que os americanos

Coincidências e mais coincidências........
Há 2 dias, postei uma matéria do site e-Marketer sobre o uso da internet no Canadá (aqui).
Hoje, recebo um artigo do mesmo site, que trata da web no Brasil !
Será só coincidência mesmo ?!

Eis o artigo, na íntegra:

E-commerce in Brazil, like many other Internet activities in that country, is maturing quickly.

Between the first half of 2005 and 2008, e-commerce revenues as reported in e-bit's "Web Shoppers" study nearly quadrupled to reach BRL3.8 billion ($2.2 billion).

According to Valor Economico, in 2007 alone the market expanded by 43%. In terms of the number of individuals buying online, the figures are almost as dramatic, with 2.6 million buyers in 2003 rising to 9.5 million in 2007.

Online Buyers* in Brazil, 2001-2007 (millions)

More likely than not, adult Internet users in Brazil have purchased something online, according to a December 2007 study by Symantec.

Brazil's 79% of users who have purchased online is in the upper reaches of worldwide rates, comparable to such advanced Internet players as Japan (82%), the UK (79%) and Germany (78%). In contrast, only 63% of US Internet users have made an online purchase. Simply put, Brazilians who use the Internet tend to use it for everything, including e-commerce.

Adult Internet Users in Select Countries Who Have Made a Purchase Online*, December 2007 (% of respondents)

Online buyers in Brazil are huge media consumers. Books, magazines and newspapers ranked as the top e-commerce categories with a 17% market share in 2007, according to e-bit.

Almost one-half (49.47%) of Brazil's online buyers use a credit card to make their purchases, versus 39.06% who use a banking ticket to buy online. Other payment methods, including debit or electronic transfer, and payment on delivery, were each favored by less than 10% of respondents to an Ipsos Public Affairs survey.

Females, who make up almost one-half of Internet users in Brazil, are a key factor driving the explosion of e-commerce. A study from e-bit reported in Business News Americas found that online transactions by females increased nearly 10% since 2000.

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