Chris Anderson is editor-in-chief of Wired Magazine.
Book Description
"The Long Tail" is a powerful new force in our economy: the rise of the niche. As the cost of reaching consumers drops dramatically, our markets are shifting from a one-size-fits-all model of mass appeal to one of unlimited variety for unique tastes. From supermarket shelves to advertising agencies, the ability to offer vast choice is changing everything, and causing us to rethink where our markets lie and how to get to them. Unlimited selection is revealing truths about what consumers want and how they want to get it, from DVDs at Netflix to songs on iTunes to advertising on Google. However, this is not just a virtue of online marketplaces; it is an example of an entirely new economic model for business, one that is just beginning to show its power. After a century of obsessing over the few products at the head of the demand curve, the new economics of distribution allow us to turn our focus to the many more products in the tail, which collectively can create a new market as big as the one we already know. The Long Tail is really about the economics of abundance. New efficiencies in distribution, manufacturing, and marketing are essentially resetting the definition of whats commercially viable across the board. If the 20th century was about hits, the 21st will be equally about niches.
From Publishers Weekly
Wired editor Anderson declares the death of "common culture"—and insists that it's for the best. Why don't we all watch the same TV shows, like we used to? Because not long ago, "we had fewer alternatives to compete for our screen attention," he writes. Smash hits have existed largely because of scarcity: with a finite number of bookstore shelves and theaters and Wal-Mart CD racks, "it's only sensible to fill them with the titles that will sell best." Today, Web sites and online retailers offer seemingly infinite inventory, and the result is the "shattering of the mainstream into a zillion different cultural shards." These "countless niches" are market opportunities for those who cast a wide net and de-emphasize the search for blockbusters. It's a provocative analysis and almost certainly on target—though Anderson's assurances that these principles are equally applicable outside the media and entertainment industries are not entirely convincing. The book overuses its examples from Google, Rhapsody, iTunes, Amazon, Netflix and eBay, and it doesn't help that most of the charts of "Long Tail" curves look the same. But Anderson manages to explain a murky trend in clear language, giving entrepreneurs and the rest of us plenty to think about. (July)
From Bookmarks Magazine
In The Long Tail, Chris Anderson offers a visionary look at the future of business and common culture. The long-tail phenomenon, he argues, will "re-shape our understanding of what people actually want to watch" (or read, etc.). While Anderson presents a fascinating idea backed by thoughtful (if repetitive) analysis, many critics questioned just how greatly the niche market will rework our common popular culture. Anderson convinced most reviewers in his discussion of Internet media sales, but his KitchenAid and Lego examples fell flat. A few pointed out that online markets constitute just 10 percent of U.S. retail, and brick-and-mortar stores will never disappear. Anderson's thesis came under a separate attack by Lee Gomes in his Wall Street Journal column. Anderson had defined the "98 Percent Rule" in his book to mean that no matter how much inventory is made available online, 98 percent of the items will sell at least once. Yet Gomes cited statistics that could indicate that, as the Web and Web services become more mainstream, the 98 Percent Rule may no longer apply: "Ecast [a music-streaming company] told me that now, with a much bigger inventory than when Mr. Anderson spoke to them two years ago, the quarterly no-play rate has risen from 2% to 12%. March data for the 1.1 million songs of Rhapsody, another streamer, shows a 22% no-play rate; another 19% got just one or two plays." If Anderson overreaches in his thesis, he has nonetheless written "one of those business books that, ironically, deserves more than a niche readership"
Houston Chronicle
From Booklist
Citing statistical curves called "long-tailed distributions" because the tails are very long relative to the heads, Anderson, editor of Wired magazine, focuses on the tail, or the development in the new digital world of an infinite number of niche markets of any size that are economically viable due to falling distribution costs and in the aggregate represent significant sales. Although the author considers primarily media and entertainment companies, he also shows the long-tail effect at eBay, KitchenAid, Legos, Salesforce.com, and Google. His nine rules for successful long-tail strategies include lowering costs and thinking niche (one product, distribution method, or price does not fit all) and giving up control by sharing information and offering choices. In this excellent book, Anderson tells that "the story of the long tail is really about the economics of abundance--what happens when the bottlenecks that stand between supply and demand in our culture start to disappear and everything becomes available to everyone."
Mary Whaley
From AudioFile
Anderson's premise that Internet-based retailing and personal expression enable much wider variety and more profitable niche markets and, thus, are killing a formerly "hit-driven" culture and retail world is somewhat controversial. (Just Google THE LONG TAIL.) But this audiobook presents the argument well, with much detail and many current (late 2005) examples. Christopher Nissley's reading style fits the content; he's clipped and staccato, like Anderson's writing. His narration is helpful to the listener who prefers not to get bogged down in the theoretical and technical parts of the book. Anderson himself reads the introduction, and there's a brief author interview at the end of Disc 7, plus downloadable copies of the book's graphics. T.F.
Book Dimension
length: (cm)23.8 width:(cm)17.3
發表於2024-12-22
The Long Tail 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載
1897年夏天,意大利經濟學傢帕纍托(Pareto)在研究英國社會分配的時候發現,百分之二十的人控製著百分之八十的財富。後人在現實世界裏形形色色的分布裏也看到瞭類似“少多眾寡”的現象:大段文字裏單詞齣現的頻率、都市城鎮的人口、沙粒的大小,甚至林火燒過的麵積。比如,把全世...
評分作為非IT人士,齣於對豆瓣的熱愛還是抽空看瞭這部被阿北推薦過的《長尾理論》。 就像阿北所說,要看這個理論以後10年如何顛覆流行文化。不自覺我的一些閱讀方式已經受到瞭改變。從20世紀末的信息大爆炸到現在有最新互聯網技術幫助你過濾感興趣的過程,daily me這個趨勢越來越不...
評分http://bizchedan.blogbus.com/logs/47197198.html 藍長平二不是一個日本人,而是四個Idea:藍海戰略、長尾理論、世界是平的,web2.0。把它們相提並論,不是因為都正流行,前三個還齣瞭暢銷書,依我看,是在說同一個事物,就是商業的未來。但可惜也都如同盲人摸象。 這頭商業...
評分世界上,你可能因為錯誤的判斷做齣正確的選擇, 也可能因為正確的判斷而做齣的錯誤的選擇; 也就是說無論你的判斷是正確的還是錯誤的,最後都可能産生錯誤的或者正確的結果; 於是麵對選擇,我們其實根本不必判斷。 上麵的這段話您要是覺得閤理,或者您決定Google看看它閤不閤...
評分作為“長尾”一詞的發明人,Chris Anderson終於推齣瞭關於長尾的書。對於不知道何為LongTail的朋友,這是一本可以快速弄明白的好書,對於已經有所瞭解的朋友,這是一個重新反思的好機會。作者並沒有將筆墨發得很散,而將精力集中在瞭LongTail的成因和産生的直接影響方麵,信息...
圖書標籤: 經濟 長尾 business Economics Internet 經濟學 eCommerce Web2.0
Anderson has a totally different written style from his oral one. His pet phrase is you know, you know, you know...The 80/20 rule makes the business hard in the physical world. Can the things change as the digital revolution on its way. Just see.
評分特彆適閤於互聯網的長尾理論。 在綫娛樂的世界裏,不存在貨架倉庫成本問題,小眾商品市場雖小,但需求持久穩定,足以與熱賣商品市場抗衡。
評分互聯網經濟對於商業模型的影響
評分Anderson has a totally different written style from his oral one. His pet phrase is you know, you know, you know...The 80/20 rule makes the business hard in the physical world. Can the things change as the digital revolution on its way. Just see.
評分我們深處巨大的變革而不自知,這本書算是喚醒意識。。
The Long Tail 2024 pdf epub mobi 電子書 下載