San Jose Gadgets Examiner - Of top 20 holiday gifts, 17 require electricity


Of top 20 holiday gifts, 17 require electricity
The wooden train set and the dollhouse appear to be over as favorite Christmas gifts this year, as 17 of 20 top-selling gifts are consumer electronics products, according to an online survey.
Game consoles, laptops, navigation devices and cameras dominated the top 20 most searched for gifts in the "Holiday Shopping Trends" report released this week by Permuto, provider of an online advertising network.
Permuto tracked product category searches with the help of partners PriceGrabber.com and Like.com to see what people are looking for this holiday season. It only tracked the most popular products of online shoppers, not those gong to physical stores.
Of the top sellers, only women's boots, puzzles and games and dolls operate without the use of electricity or batteries (save for the occasional Chatty Kathy or her modern-day equivalent.)
The Top 20 product categories are as follows:
LCD or plasma TVs
Cameras
Laptop computers
GPS navigation systems
MP3 player.
External hard drives
Camcorders
Games and puzzles (non-electric)
Game consoles and accessories
Women's boots (non-electric)
Printers
Blu-ray players
LCD computer monitors
Watches (are there any wind-ups left?)
Electric toys
Desktop computers
Wii games (need a Wii console to play them)
Educational toys (example, EyeClops Night Vision toy)
Dolls
Xbox consoles and accessories
While traffic to online shopping sites is up this year over last, shoppers claim to be tightening their belts, Permuto says. More than half (52.9 percent) of shoppers surveyed said they'll be spending less this year than last, 42.3 percent will be spending about the same and only 4.8 percent will be spending more. The largest category of shoppers (36 percent) said they'll probably spend between $100 and $499 total on gifts.
Don't forget to save for the electric bill.

By Robert Mullins

Published on December 17, 2009 


sjgadgetexaminerlogoThe wooden train set and the dollhouse appear to be over as favorite Christmas gifts this year, as 17 of 20 top-selling gifts are consumer electronics products, according to an online survey.


Game consoles, laptops, navigation devices and cameras dominated the top 20 most searched for gifts in the "Holiday Shopping Trends" report released this week by Permuto, provider of an online advertising network.


Permuto tracked product category searches with the help of partners PriceGrabber.com and Like.com to see what people are looking for this holiday season. It only tracked the most popular products of online shoppers, not those gong to physical stores.


Of the top sellers, only women's boots, puzzles and games and dolls operate without the use of electricity or batteries (save for the occasional Chatty Kathy or her modern-day equivalent.)


The Top 20 product categories are as follows:


 1.  LCD or plasma TVs

 2.  Cameras

 3.  Laptop computers

 4.  GPS navigation systems

 5.  MP3 player.

 6.  External hard drives

 7.  Camcorders

 8.  Games and puzzles (non-electric)

 9.  Game consoles and accessories

 10.  Women's boots (non-electric)

 11.  Printers

 12.  Blu-ray players

 13.  LCD computer monitors

 14.  Watches (are there any wind-ups left?)

 15. Electric toys

 16.  Desktop computers

 17.  Wii games (need a Wii console to play them)

 18.  Educational toys (example, EyeClops Night Vision toy)

 19.  Dolls

 20.  Xbox consoles and accessories


While traffic to online shopping sites is up this year over last, shoppers claim to be tightening their belts, Permuto says. More than half (52.9 percent) of shoppers surveyed said they'll be spending less this year than last, 42.3 percent will be spending about the same and only 4.8 percent will be spending more. The largest category of shoppers (36 percent) said they'll probably spend between $100 and $499 total on gifts.


Don't forget to save for the electric bill.


Source:  http://www.examiner.com/x-6470-San-Jose-Gadgets-Examiner~y2009m12d17-Of-top-20-holiday-gifts-17-require-electricity