Worldata Obtains ShopAtHome.com E-Mail Files

Worldata/WebConnect yesterday announced its management of 19 ShopAtHome.com opt-in e-mail files totaling more than 2.6 million consumers who have indicated their buying interests.


"It's one of the few business-to-consumer online buying interest files available to e-mail marketers," said Jay Schwedelson, corporate vice president at Worldata/WebConnect, Boca Raton, FL.


The ShopAtHome.com Master File includes all 2.6 million opt-in consumers and offers gender, geography, income and interest selects.


The 18 subfiles by interest are Apparel Product Buyers; Auto Accessory Product Buyers; Computer/Electronic Product Buyers; Fitness Product Buyers; Food & Wine Product Buyers; Gift Product Buyers; Hobby Product Buyers; Home Product Buyers; Investment Product Buyers; Luxury Product Buyers; Music, Book & Video Product Buyers; Online & Catalog Product Buyers; Pet Product Buyers; Small-Office/Home-Office Product Buyers; Sports Product Buyers; Travel Product Buyers; Young Professional Product Buyers; and Family Product Buyers.


ShopAtHome.com users have an average age of 34 to 53 and annual incomes of more than $30,000.


All ShopAtHome.com e-mail files have base prices of $225 per thousand.


close

Next Article in Database Marketing

Follow us on Twitter @dmnews

Latest Jobs:

Featured Listings

KBM Group

KBM Group

KBM Group transforms marketing efforts into mutually beneficial customer conversations through data-driven insights. ...

More in Database Marketing

Silo-ization vs. The People Side of Marketing

Silo-ization vs. The People Side of Marketing

Silo-ization is a silent killer. It destroys the most effective factor in marketing: people.

IBM Scoops Dannon for Big Data

IBM Scoops Dannon for Big Data

Yogurt purveyor Dannon is using IBM's cloud-based predictive analytics to enhance its forecasting abilities.

B2B Marketers Need to Move Beyond Demographics

B2B Marketers Need to Move Beyond Demographics

Leveraging Big Data for better prospecting and improved conversion rates.