Not Even Web Retailers Will Be Exempt From the Aftereffects of Katrina

By BOB TEDESCHI
September 5, 2005

AS the Gulf Coast reels from Katrina's devastation, online businesses 
are struggling to gauge the impact of the possible loss of half a 
million prospective customers for weeks or months.

"This is a tough one, because it is a big market," said Patti Freeman 
Evans, an analyst with Jupiter Research, an Internet consulting firm. 
"You can't get goods in there, and people aren't in their homes 
anyway, so there's not much companies can do."

According to comScore Networks, an Internet research and consulting 
firm, 860,000 people, on average, surfed the Web from their homes or 
offices in New Orleans and the Mississippi towns of Biloxi and 
Gulfport each day in the week preceding the storm.

People who fled the Gulf Coast will no doubt find Internet access in 
their temporary homes, but few are likely to look on the Web for the 
necessities of life.

Online travel agencies like Expedia, Travelocity and Orbitz are no 
doubt feeling the pinch more than most online retailers. Not only 
must they cope with a deluge of calls from customers who had booked 
trips to the Gulf Coast and now want their money back, they must also 
face up to the possibility of a slump in sales as some vacationers 
and business executives deterred from flying to New Orleans drop 
their travel plans altogether.

...

http://www.nytimes.com/2005/09/05/technology/05ecom.html?ex=1283572800&en=729119de4961aaf5&ei=5090


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