(Newstream) -- A Web study conducted by the Content Intelligence Group of Lyra
Research shows a dramatic preference for the Internet as an information source for both
personal and special interests and business information needs. For personal and special
interest information needs, 63 percent of survey respondents chose the Internet compared
with just 18 percent who chose magazines; for work-related information, 48 percent
selected the Web as their favorite source while only 7 percent preferred magazines.
The study, cited in the featured article, "Media Power Shift," is showcased
in a new publication, Content Intelligence. The article also notes that once
consumers begin using the Web, they use it more frequently as their experience increases
and that these same users also tend to use traditional media sources significantly less.
The article suggests that understanding how overall media usage behavior has changed for
consumers with the most Web experience may provide insight and a possible basis for
predicting future behavior patterns.
"The research shows that exposure and experience with the Web is changing
consumers' fundamental attitude toward traditional media," comments John Mc
Intyre,
managing editor of Content Intelligence, at the launch of the premiere edition this
morning. "In comparison with other media sources, we found that user control is a
critical preference attribute of the Internet as a medium, providing individual control
over content source, time of access, content depth, and other parameters," Mc Intyre
explains. He adds, "The survey reveals that there is a fundamental shift in media
consumption occurring, and traditional publishers will need to evolve as Web adoption and
use increases."
The premiere issue also includes a revealing article, "Web Ad Autopsy," an
in-depth survey of top managers in the Web publishing and advertising industries with an
accompanying analysis. The research concludes that, while Web advertising has a bright
future, publishers and advertising agencies will have work harder to convince advertisers
to fully embrace the Web.