For consumers of media worldwide, online usage now exceeds offline media consumption. Offline media such as TV, radio and newspapers still account for
the majority of media time in mature Internet markets such as the Netherlands, Germany, the UK and the U.S.
TV remains the strongest traditional medium, per the GlobalWebIndex report, with
average daily viewing time across all markets of 2.49 hours. U.S. TV consumption is the greatest, with an average 3.59 hours daily.
But overall, more media time is spent online than
offline in 23 out of the 31 major markets tracked by the study.
Global consumption of digital media now accounts for 57% of daily media time. Overall, consumers now spend an average of 10.7
hours a day with all forms of media -- and 5.6 hours of that on digital, according to the study.
The report is a based on a survey of 32,000 respondents in 31 countries that was conducted
in the fourth quarter of 2012.
The report also found that online consumption is heavier in rapidly growing markets such as UAE and China, where total online time accounted for 7.3 and 6.1
hours of average daily media consumption, respectively. In China, the report found, only 35% of media time is spent with traditional media.
“This data shows why it is so critical to
build a holistic communications strategy,” stated GlobalWebIndex founder Tom Smith. “Consumers worldwide have increasingly digitalized their media consumption and online now dominates the
way they spend their day. This is a clear argument for online media to get a greater share of advertising spend, regardless of where you are in the world.”
Consumers in Argentina have
the most voracious media appetites, spending nearly 13 hours a day with some form of media, per the report. Japanese consumers spend the least time with media, about 7.56 hours a day.
Social media increasingly dominates the time that consumers spend online. The study found that globally it accounts for 48% of total digital time.
More on the report can be found here.
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