Black Friday Boasts $648 Million in U.S. Online Holiday Spending, Up 9 Percent vs. Year Ago

Thanksgiving Day Surges 28 Percent to $407 Million as Consumers Increasingly Use Day for Online Shopping

RESTON, VA, November 28, 2010 – Comscore (NASDAQ : SCOR), a leader in measuring the digital world, today reported U.S. retail e-commerce spending for the first 26 days of the November – December 2010 holiday season. For the holiday season-to-date, $11.64 billion has been spent online, marking a 13-percent increase versus the corresponding days last year. Black Friday (November 26) saw $648 million in online sales, making it the heaviest online spending day to date in 2010 and representing a 9-percent increase versus Black Friday 2009. Thanksgiving Day (November 26), traditionally a lighter day for online holiday spending, achieved a strong 28-percent increase to $407 million.

2010 Holiday Season To Date vs. Corresponding Days* in 2009
Non-Travel (Retail) Spending
Excludes Auctions and Large Corporate Purchases
Total U.S. – Home/Work/University Locations
Source: Comscore, Inc.

Millions ($)

2009

2010

Percent Change

November 1 – 26

$10,317

$11,639

13%

Thanksgiving Day (Nov. 25)

$318

$407

28%

Black Friday (Nov. 26)

$595

$648

9%

*Corresponding days based on corresponding shopping days
(November 2 thru November 27, 2009)

“Although Black Friday is known for the flurry of activity occurring in brick-and-mortar retail stores, online shopping is increasingly becoming the refuge of those preferring to avoid the crowds and long lines,” said Comscore chairman, Gian Fulgoni. “The $648 million in online spending this Black Friday represents the heaviest online spending day of the season-to-date and a solid increase over last year’s Black Friday. Interestingly, we are also seeing consumers beginning to buy online in a more meaningful way on Thanksgiving Day, which has historically seen low buying activity.”

Black Friday Bargains Boost Web Browsing Behavior

As the online channel becomes increasingly influential in driving offline shopping behavior, consumers are turning to Black Friday sites on the web to conduct research in advance of the day’s events. Comscore analyzed eight Black Friday deal sites for the five days ending Black Friday (Nov. 22-26) compared to the corresponding days last year, finding that Black-Friday.net led the pack with 3.1 million unique visitors, up 42 percent versus last year. BlackFriday.info followed with 2.7 million visitors, while Black-Friday2010.com (up 478 percent to 1.5 million visitors) showed the greatest growth.

Unique Visitors to Selected Sites Featuring Black Friday Deals
Nov. 22-26, 2010 vs. Nov. 23-27, 2009
Total U.S. – Home/Work/University Locations
Source: Comscore, Inc.

Unique Visitors (000)

Nov. 23-27, 2009

Nov. 22-26, 2010

Percent Change

black-friday.net

2,224

3,147

42%

blackfriday.info

2,753

2,671

-3%

bfads.net

3,918

2,483

-37%

blackfriday2010.com*

266

1,537

478%

theblackfriday.com

1,368

1,257

-8%

blackfriday.com

551

630

14%

blackfriday.fm

409

422

3%

gottadeal.com

453

229

-49%

*Site was known as BlackFriday2009.com in 2009

Some other notable findings about Black Friday deal-seeking include:

  • The number of visitors to coupon sites on Black Friday grew 4 percent versus year ago to 3.6 million visitors, while the total number of visits to the category increased 16 percent to 7.4 million.
  • BlackFriday.info was the most visited coupon site on Black Friday with 630,000 unique visitors, followed by CouponCabin.com (543,000), RetailMeNot.com (332,000 visitors) and Groupon.com (332,000).
  • ShopLocal.com ranked as the most visited comparison shopping site on Black Friday with 2.1 million visitors, up 45 percent versus year ago.

Amazon Wins Black Friday Online

Four retail properties surpassed four million U.S. unique visitors on Black Friday, with mixed results in comparison to last year. Amazon Sites was the most visited retail property on Black Friday, growing 25 percent from the corresponding shopping day a year ago, followed by Walmart, which saw a marginal decline of 1 percent. Target Corporation (up 9 percent) and Best Buy Sites (up 1 percent) rounded out the top four.

Growth in Unique Visitors Among Top 4 Most Visited Retailer Properties on Black Friday
Excludes Auction Sites (e.g. eBay)
Black Friday 2010 vs. Black Friday 2009
Total U.S. – Home/Work/University Locations
Source: Comscore, Inc.

Retail Property

Percent Change in Unique Visitors

Amazon Sites

25%

Walmart

-1%

Target Corporation

9%

Best Buy Sites

1%

“Amazon, with a sizeable increase in traffic on Black Friday, continues to experience remarkable success during the holiday season,” added Mr. Fulgoni. “We will be watching closely to see if the leading online retailer is able to sustain this momentum through Cyber Monday and into the heart of the online shopping season.”

About Comscore
Comscore, Inc. (NASDAQ: SCOR) is a global leader in measuring the digital world and preferred source of digital business analytics. For more information, please visit www.comscore.com/companyinfo.

Press
Bill Daddi
Daddi Brand Communications
646-370-1341
press@comscore.com