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Long Tail

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Long Tail

The potential for online retailers to make more money than their bricks and mortar counterparts because there is virtually unlimited "shelf space" to offer products. Another key factor is that merchandise is offered via recommendations with links from one product to another so that people who purchase one item are encouraged to look at several others. Most notably, book, video and music sales, where there is a vast supply of product, have benefited significantly from this approach, exemplified by Amazon.com, Netflix and Rhapsody.

Less of More
Theorized by Wired Magazine editor Chris Anderson, who turned the notion into a book in 2006 titled "The Long Tail: Why the Future of Business is Selling Less of More," the title refers to a graph showing fewer products selling in large quantities versus many more products that sell in low quantities. The low-quantity items stretch out on the x-axis of the graph, creating a very long tail that generates more revenue overall. Even though a smaller quantity of each item is sold, there is a much greater variety of these items to sell.

Anderson asserts that the Long Tail manifests in Google and eBay, which derive significant revenue because they deal with a huge number of customers. He also mentions blogs and wikis as benefactors of the Long Tail as more people contribute editorial material than ever before. For a most interesting exploration of this online phenomenon, read "The Long Tail" by Chris Anderson (Hyperion, 2006).


The Long Tail
When companies sell a large variety of products online, a graph of all products sold generates the long tail.
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References in periodicals archive
If you used the long tail method to cast on your stitches, the first row will be a WS row.
"The Long Tail is an important manual for the new economics of the Internet and digital culture.
Companies like Google and Amazon have already used The Long Tail strategy, and today, BusyTrade is demonstrating another example of The Long Tail reflected in e-commerce.
Blossom (2005) discusses the long tail of content and libraries.
In 2004, Chris Anderson, editor of Wired magazine, published an article entitled "The Long Tail," and later (2006) a book in which he theorized that in a market of virtual shelf space (the digital world), slower moving product such as deep catalog titles, less popular genres, and indie releases can collectively equal or outsell the best-selling titles.
"I think that in most birds with long tails, the long tail is not costly," said Clark.
THE SOURCE: Should You Invest in the Long Tail?" by Anita Elberse, in Harvard Business Review, July-Aug.
The Long Tail is a concept credited to Chris Anderson, who first wrote about it in an October 2004 article in Wired magazine, and later in his 2006 book The Long Taft: Why The Future of Business is Selling Less of More.
Businesses like Logue's and Lavender's are riding "the long tail of film," Omura says.
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