The study, commissioned by the Online Publishers Association and conducted by comScore networks, found that $675 million was spent for online content in the United States in 2001 – a 92% increase over 2000. Q1 2002 spending jumped 155% to $300 million compared to the same period in 2001.
The Online Publishers Association said a jump in the number of online content buyers – 12.4 million in Q1 2002, up 5.3 million – contributed to the growth in online content revenues. Consumers of paid content represented 9.2% of the total Internet population, the study said.
Spending in nearly all content categories rose 100% in Q1. The top three categories – Business Content, Entertainment and Personals/Dating – accounted for 59% of online spending.
Michael Zimbalist, executive director of the Online Publishers Association, said the study showed the market undergoing rapid growth.
”As content providers get smarter about creating valuable for-pay offerings, an increasing number of consumers are responding with their wallets,” he said.
The study also found:
The top 10 web destinations ranked by consumer content revenues are: real.com; wsj.com; match.com; yahoo.com; consumerreports.org; ancestry.com; weightwatchers.com; 1800ussearch.com; matchmaker.com; and consumerinfo.com.