Word-of-Mouth Ain’t Just Blogging

Face-to-Face Still Number One Way Consumers Make Recommendations According to GfK NOP Study

New York, April 12, 2005—GfK NOP (formerly GfK NOP) today announced results of a national study uncovering where the "roots" of grassroots marketing lie. The findings reveal face-to-face remains the strongest medium for spreading word-of-mouth (W.O.M.)

When asked how they make recommendations, 80% of consumers say they make them in-person, followed by 68% who say they make them over the telephone. This phenomenon is even stronger among The Influential Americans®, (the one in ten Americans who tell the other nine how to vote, where to eat and what to buy, according to over 60 years of GfK NOP research) with 90% of this group making in-person recommendations and 79% making recommendations by phone.

Surprisingly, the study found that less than 40% of consumers use e-mail to make recommendations to others, including via personal e-mail (37%), by e-mail forwarding (32%) or through mass e-mails (12%). While slightly higher percentages of Influentials use e-mail (personal e-mail 53%, e-mail forwarding 39% and mass e-mails 18%), face-to-face communication still far outweighs this medium.

Conversation Catalysts

Recommendations are triggered from a variety of factors, as Americans are inspired by different forms of marketing and media. Consumers said the following contributed to a recommendation made in the past year:

General Consumers
The Influential Americans®
Magazine
54%
61%
In Store
53%
58%
Television
53%
55%
Newspaper
47%
53%
Coupon, Discount
44%
49%
Radio
37%
44%
Web
35%
45%
Free Sample
31%
39%
E-mail
18%
26%

Familiarity Breeds Word-of-Mouth, But So Does Geography

While respondents say they are most likely to pass along a recommendation to friends (88%), family members (87%), people who share the same interests (66%) and colleagues (61%), significant numbers also say they spread the word to neighbors (42%), community group members (42%), other consumers (35%) and fellow parents at kids' activities (27%).

Word-of-Mouth...A Double-Edged Sword

Although generating W.O.M. is crucial to any marketing campaign, criticism can be spread as easily as recommendations. More than 40% of Americans share their negative opinions about travel (51%), health and fitness issues (50%), technology (48%), TV programs (46%) and investments (41%).

About the GfK NOP World Word-of-Mouth Study

The word-of-mouth study was conducted in February 2005 among 1,000 American consumers ages 18 to 65 via telephone.

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