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PRIMIR: Trends and Future for Financial and Transactional Printing, Section VI. Consumer Research

By PRIMIR - Print Industries Market Information and Research Organization

TransPromo


The majority of consumers surveyed were clear in their feelings that the inclusion of printed promotional offers appearing directly on bills and statements is not the ideal.  They want transactional documents to be "simple, easy to understand, and faster to read." and for promotional offers to be included separately.


Source: Study commissioned by PRIMIRsm and conducted by I.T. Strategies (Hanover, MA)

About the Complete PRIMIR Study:  This study identifies and quantifies the North American market for financial and transactional printing in 2007 with forecasts through 2012.  Segments include statements, documentation, policies, and prospectuses (including transpromotional).  It also investigates regulatory and other drivers and barriers impacting this specialty printing segment.  Vertical markets include insurance, financial and banking.  The study addresses the influence of the Internet, EBPP, and transpromotional trends, consumer acceptance of each, and delves into the trends in printing processes utilized to serve this market including installed base of equipment and unique workflow requirements.  Consumer research was an integral part of the methodology.

About this Research Summary: This top-line summary focuses on the consumer research portion (Section VI) of the overall Trends and Future for Financial and Transactional Printing study.

Type of Promotional Material/Activity Tested:  The primary goal of the consumer research survey portion of the overall study was to determine the current and future use by consumers of paper transactional documents such as bills and statements.  A secondary goal was to determine the proclivity of consumers toward transpromotional printing.

Sample Population: 547 US adults responded to the consumer research survey.  A survey sample of 500 for the US population is considered to have a ±5% confidence interval with a 95% confidence level.  This means that 95% of the time, I.T. Strategies was confident that percentages in the actual population would not vary by more than 5% in either direction.

 

More than 80% of the respondents report having high-speed access to the Internet.  Almost 75% of the respondents were 50 years of age or older; 26% were between the ages of 18 and 49.  Students were not included in the survey.  Sixty-eight percent of respondents were female; 32% male.  Thirty percent of the respondents earned less than $30,000 a year; 16% earned more than $75,000.  Thirty-four percent have a Bachelor’s degree or higher.  More than 50% were married.

Methodology: An e-mail survey of consumers was conducted in Fall 2007.  The survey consisted of both closed and open-ended questions.  In total, there were almost 5,000 individual, open-ended responses.  Open-ended questions were not required to be answered.

Top Line Results:
 

 

 

Electric bills 86%
Checking account statements 83%
Credit card bills 75%

 

 

Not available electronically 35%
Need it in paper format  33%
Paper is more convenient 31%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Read all

Read most, discard some

Read some, discard most

Never read any

Age 18-29 9% 13% 31% 47%
Age 30-49 8% 9% 48% 36%
Age 50-64 7% 6% 53% 33%
Age 65 6% 14% 53% 27%
   

 

 

Take-Aways from the Consumer Research section of the full report:


PAPER DOCUMENTS:  “People like paper for their transactional documents for a number of reasons including its fundamental nature as a record keeper in our society; it is tangible proof of a transaction; and it is the basis for the way people save, file and retrieve their financial information.”

PROMOTIONAL OFFERS:  More than half of consumers surveyed report they read some (yet discard most) of promotional offers received and nearly one in five read most or all promotional materials received.  One-third discard promotional materials without reading them.
 

TRANSPROMOTIONAL OFFERS:   The majority of consumers surveyed were clear in their feelings that the inclusion of printed promotional offers appearing directly on bills and statements is not the ideal.  They want transactional documents to be “simple, easy to understand, and faster to read”  --  and for promotional offers to be included separately.
 

ELECTRONIC DOCUMENTS:  "While consumers like their paper, they also like the convenience of receiving "green" e-statements.  Many receive both.  About 25% of the respondents expect some transition of one of their bills to e-statements over the next two years.  These are likely to be checking account statements and credit card statements.  This shift may further challenge transpromotional printing opportunities as credit card statements are one of the key data sources that lend itself well to transpromotional printing.”
 

Complexity rating: 1 out of 3  (Complex statistical analysis scale: 1= none, 2= moderate, 3 = difficult)


Table of Contents - Trends and Future for Financial and Transactional Printing (PDF)


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PRIMIR will be offering for sale the data from the consumer research portion of this study for cross tabs and further analysis.  For details, please contact Jackie Bland at (703) 264-7211 or jbland@primir.org