Daily Research News Online

The global MR industry's daily paper since 2000

UK Websites of the Year 2002

December 31 2002

Nielsen//NetRatings has announced its top websites of the year for 2002, based on continuous measurement of the audience and growth of the Internet in the UK, as well as analyst's own opinions and insight.

Website of the Year was named as Google with 4.7 million at-home visitors and audience share up 10 points. 'Google's audience share jumped from 18% to 28% during 2002; its toolbar, news and shopping sites won the admiration of analysts; and it's seen its name become a new verb. All that and it is consistently in profit. The success story shows no signs of stopping.'

E-Commerce Site of the Year was named as eBay UK with 2.9 million at-home visitors and audience share up 9.6 points. '2002 was the year when eBay really took off in Britain, and its growth curve in other countries suggests it can keep on expanding at this rate next year.'

British Site of the Year was named as BBCi., with 4.1 million at-home visitors and audience share up 6.8 points. 'News is still the BBC's strongest suit, but the way it's diversified its BBCi portal, with search, digital radio, and programme-based content has been extremely successful.'

Broadband Site of the Year was named as Windowsmedia, with 1.6 million at-home visitors and audience share up 3.9 points. 'It's not strictly a broadband site, but the success of the new-look Windows Media player leaves Windowsmedia very well-placed in the battle with Realplayer to be the carrier of choice for streamed and downloaded content.'

Word-of-Mouth Site of the Year was named as Kazaa, with 1.1 million at-home visitors and audience share up 6.2 points. 'Kazaa is a file-sharing programme which has filled the gap left by the decline of Napster and Audiogalaxy - it's massive in Europe. It's started to sign deals with portals but the question is whether it can avoid the kind of legal problems that have crippled other big file-sharing sites.'

Newcomer of the Year was named as DooYoo, with 591,000 at-home visitors and audience share up 3.5 points. 'It hasn't made the kind of splash Friends Reunited or Napster did, but consumer opinion site DooYoo has quietly built a solid British audience, and is the highest 'new entry' on this chart.'

Most Useful Site of the Year was named as Symantec with 1.2 million at-home visitors and audience share up 6.1 points. 'The success of anti-virus provider Symantec is a sign of the times - people are a lot more knowledgeable and worried about viruses, and are being bombarded with spam e-mails that might contain a virus. This is one of the problems the Internet industry has to tackle to keep consumer trust.'

Giant of the Year was named as Microsoft, with 5.6 million at-home visitors and audience share up 5.1 points. 'The launch of Windows XP and the many add-ons and patches Microsoft made available on its website explains the big jump in popularity for this site, though it always gets a huge number of visitors.'

E-Tailer of the Year was named as Amazon UK, with 3.7 million at-home visitors and audience share up 4.8 points. 'Amazon's brand and audience share gets stronger each year - more than one in five British web users now visit it each month. Profitability over the whole year must be on the cards in 2003.'

Revamp of the Year was named as O2, with 693,000 at-home visitors and audience share up 4.1 points. 'Some canny sponsorship deals - for instance Big Brother - and an enthusiastic uptake of joint web/mobile games and tools helped raise the profile and audience of what was once the unfashionable BT Cellnet.'

Tom Ewing, European Internet Analyst comments '2002 was an exciting year for the Internet in the UK. We started to see a number of well-known sites reaching break-even or profitability this year, as the market reached maturity. We now have an environment where the best-known brands are well-established and trusted, and where good new ideas can rapidly acquire the audience base they need to succeed. Not all the sites we've singled out appear in our top domains lists each month but they've been 2002's best performers and show the resilience and creativity of the online sector.'


All articles 2006-23 written and edited by Mel Crowther and/or Nick Thomas unless otherwise stated.

Select a region below...
View all recent news
for UK
UK
USA
View all recent news
for USA
View all recent news
for Asia
Asia
Australia
View all recent news
for Australia

REGISTER FOR NEWS EMAILS

To receive (free) news headlines by email, please register online