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Understanding Chinese online users and their visits to websites: application of Zipf's law

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Understanding Chinese online users and their visits to websites: application of Zipf's law. / Jiang, Qiqi; Tan, Chuan Hoo; Phang, Chee Wei et al.
In: International Journal of Information Management, Vol. 33, No. 5, 10.2013, p. 752-763.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Jiang, Q, Tan, CH, Phang, CW, Sutanto, J & Wei, KK 2013, 'Understanding Chinese online users and their visits to websites: application of Zipf's law', International Journal of Information Management, vol. 33, no. 5, pp. 752-763. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijinfomgt.2013.05.006

APA

Jiang, Q., Tan, C. H., Phang, C. W., Sutanto, J., & Wei, K. K. (2013). Understanding Chinese online users and their visits to websites: application of Zipf's law. International Journal of Information Management, 33(5), 752-763. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijinfomgt.2013.05.006

Vancouver

Jiang Q, Tan CH, Phang CW, Sutanto J, Wei KK. Understanding Chinese online users and their visits to websites: application of Zipf's law. International Journal of Information Management. 2013 Oct;33(5):752-763. Epub 2013 Jun 21. doi: 10.1016/j.ijinfomgt.2013.05.006

Author

Jiang, Qiqi ; Tan, Chuan Hoo ; Phang, Chee Wei et al. / Understanding Chinese online users and their visits to websites : application of Zipf's law. In: International Journal of Information Management. 2013 ; Vol. 33, No. 5. pp. 752-763.

Bibtex

@article{e7aadcc41f4f482dbcdbedca71e6e23a,
title = "Understanding Chinese online users and their visits to websites: application of Zipf's law",
abstract = "Competition for consumers to visit company websites has intensified in recent years. An important indicator of website popularity (and consequent survival) is the extent to which the website can draw consumer visits vis-{\`a}-vis other websites. A majority of the current understanding on consumer visits is limited to a single website, and leaves little knowledge on the performance of one website compared with others. In tracking the Internet usage behavior of 200 individuals in Mainland China for 30 consecutive days, we applied Zipf's law to identify the divergence points separating popular websites from non-popular ones. Two measurements were used, namely, visit traffic (number) and visit engagement (time spent). We observed that 94.87% of the entire visit traffic is devoted to 15.08% of all visited websites, whereas 84.63% of engagements are on the top 6.16% visited websites. These findings suggest that few websites accounted for the bulk of online traffic and time. Further, we segmented the dataset based on two key proxy variables of user demographics, which are gender and occupation. The findings on visit traffic remained salient after considering user segments, but the findings on website engagement varied across different user segments. Our further analysis, which categorized the visited websites by their main service, revealed the type of Internet users attracted to popular websites.",
keywords = "Zipf's law, Internet usage pattern, User demographics, Chinese Internet market",
author = "Qiqi Jiang and Tan, {Chuan Hoo} and Phang, {Chee Wei} and Juliana Sutanto and Wei, {Kwok Kei}",
year = "2013",
month = oct,
doi = "10.1016/j.ijinfomgt.2013.05.006",
language = "English",
volume = "33",
pages = "752--763",
journal = "International Journal of Information Management",
issn = "0268-4012",
publisher = "Elsevier Limited",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Understanding Chinese online users and their visits to websites

T2 - application of Zipf's law

AU - Jiang, Qiqi

AU - Tan, Chuan Hoo

AU - Phang, Chee Wei

AU - Sutanto, Juliana

AU - Wei, Kwok Kei

PY - 2013/10

Y1 - 2013/10

N2 - Competition for consumers to visit company websites has intensified in recent years. An important indicator of website popularity (and consequent survival) is the extent to which the website can draw consumer visits vis-à-vis other websites. A majority of the current understanding on consumer visits is limited to a single website, and leaves little knowledge on the performance of one website compared with others. In tracking the Internet usage behavior of 200 individuals in Mainland China for 30 consecutive days, we applied Zipf's law to identify the divergence points separating popular websites from non-popular ones. Two measurements were used, namely, visit traffic (number) and visit engagement (time spent). We observed that 94.87% of the entire visit traffic is devoted to 15.08% of all visited websites, whereas 84.63% of engagements are on the top 6.16% visited websites. These findings suggest that few websites accounted for the bulk of online traffic and time. Further, we segmented the dataset based on two key proxy variables of user demographics, which are gender and occupation. The findings on visit traffic remained salient after considering user segments, but the findings on website engagement varied across different user segments. Our further analysis, which categorized the visited websites by their main service, revealed the type of Internet users attracted to popular websites.

AB - Competition for consumers to visit company websites has intensified in recent years. An important indicator of website popularity (and consequent survival) is the extent to which the website can draw consumer visits vis-à-vis other websites. A majority of the current understanding on consumer visits is limited to a single website, and leaves little knowledge on the performance of one website compared with others. In tracking the Internet usage behavior of 200 individuals in Mainland China for 30 consecutive days, we applied Zipf's law to identify the divergence points separating popular websites from non-popular ones. Two measurements were used, namely, visit traffic (number) and visit engagement (time spent). We observed that 94.87% of the entire visit traffic is devoted to 15.08% of all visited websites, whereas 84.63% of engagements are on the top 6.16% visited websites. These findings suggest that few websites accounted for the bulk of online traffic and time. Further, we segmented the dataset based on two key proxy variables of user demographics, which are gender and occupation. The findings on visit traffic remained salient after considering user segments, but the findings on website engagement varied across different user segments. Our further analysis, which categorized the visited websites by their main service, revealed the type of Internet users attracted to popular websites.

KW - Zipf's law

KW - Internet usage pattern

KW - User demographics

KW - Chinese Internet market

U2 - 10.1016/j.ijinfomgt.2013.05.006

DO - 10.1016/j.ijinfomgt.2013.05.006

M3 - Journal article

VL - 33

SP - 752

EP - 763

JO - International Journal of Information Management

JF - International Journal of Information Management

SN - 0268-4012

IS - 5

ER -