CHICAGO/NEW YORK (Reuters) - More U.S. online shoppers plan to give Amazon.com Inc AMZN.O the bulk of their holiday business this year than in previous years, according to a Reuters/Ipsos opinion poll, despite costly efforts by traditional retailers to attract customers to their websites.

Slideshow ( 3 images )

The online poll of 2,644 adults, released on Wednesday, found that 60 percent of online shoppers planned to do most of their holiday buying on Amazon.com, up from 50 percent during the same period in 2015. Meanwhile, the proportion of shoppers who said they expected to do most of their shopping at Walmart.com, Target.com and Macys.com declined by about 1 percentage point each in that period.

Consumers opting increasingly for convenience and speedy delivery have already pushed online sales this holiday season to record highs, making it all the more crucial that retailers get their digital businesses into gear.

Wal-Mart Stores Inc WMT.N, Target Corp TGT.N and Macy's Inc M.N, like many of their peers, have invested in deeper online discounts and free shipping this holiday season, potentially hurting fourth-quarter profit margins to win back customers who have turned increasingly to Amazon.com.

Retailers have also invested heavily in sprucing up their websites and mobile device apps. They are rolling out more fulfillment options such as curbside pickup, click-and-collect and same-day delivery. The holiday shopping season can account for 20 to 40 percent of annual sales for many retailers.

Anand Raghuraman, EY’s Americas leader for consumer products and retail strategy, said traditional retailers’ online sales were growing, but not fast enough to win market share.

“They’re dealing with an 800-pound gorilla that has different metrics around profitability than they do, which is tough to compete with,” said Raghuraman.

Earnest Research, which looks at anonymous card transactions made by millions of U.S. shoppers, said data from the two weeks after Thanksgiving showed Amazon’s market share of U.S. sales had risen 2.6 percent from the same period last year.

Meanwhile Walmart’s in-store and online market share for the period was down 1.7 percent, while Target had lost 0.6 percent and Macy’s was down 0.5 percent, according to Earnest.

Target expects fourth-quarter digital growth to once again be among the best in the industry, spokesman Joshua Thomas said. Macy’s spokeswoman Radina Russell said the department store chain had begun the holiday season well and would continue to offer value online and in stores.

Walmart did not immediately provide comment.

To be sure, analytics firms and industry groups expect most traditional retailers to report higher holiday sales this year, both online and in stores, driven by discounting, low unemployment, rising consumer confidence and good weather across the country.

Sales on Thanksgiving and Black Friday also topped prior years and Amazon.com said it broke sales records during that holiday weekend.

According to the Reuters/Ipsos poll, about one in every four adults plan to shop primarily or entirely online this holiday season, up from one in five in 2012. Convenience, delivery and the ability to compare prices easily were the most common reasons people choose to shop online, the poll showed.

The Reuters/Ipsos poll was conducted in English throughout the United States from Nov. 27 to Dec. 7. Because it is an online poll, the respondents may be more experienced with computers and online shopping than the general public. The poll has a credibility interval, a measure of accuracy, of 2 percentage points.

(GRAPHIC - Amazon seen dominating holiday sales: tmsnrt.rs/2kpOyPq)