-
|

-
ARTICLE ...
|
|
-
|
"THE
LONG TAIL"...
A recently
published article in Wired Magazine - finally justifying the future
creation, and smashing success of SurferzRule.com,
as envisioned by D. Dragon
Surferzrule
was conceived by Daryl Dragon around 1997. Since then, and still
today, the internet is being redefined on a daily basis. It is
Daryl Dragon's opinion, that, for the first time, a brilliantly
written article - written by Mr. Chris Anderson (Wired's edtor
in chief), , and printed by WIRED MAGAZINE, on 10/08/04, has finally
substantiated the reasoning behind the SurferzRule eportal concept.
SURfERZRULE: A ONE STOP portal, featuring all kinds of entertainment-oriented
content is all that's truly missing from the internet. I suggest
you first visit this SurferzRule-Explanation
page, and then scroll down this page - to read the article entitled,
THE LONG TAIL, extracted from Wired Magazine.
Why do I (D. Dragon) continue to keep this now, obviously outdated
website which attempts to describe 'SurferzRule', up on the net?
Because someday, somebody's GOING TO create a SurferzRule type
site as I describe and envision. In truth, I CANNOT fund &
operate this monstrous SurferzRule.com concept on my own. I need
a few fellow, dedicated visionaries.. and voila, with your help
and collaboration, the worldwide stigma of ongoing, 'stifled creativity'
is magically healed. Interested?
|
-
|
-
The
Long Tail
-
By Chris Anderson
-
Forget squeezing millions from a few megahits at the top of the
charts. The future of entertainment is in the millions of niche
markets at the shallow end of the bitstream.
-
In 1988, a British mountain climber named Joe Simpson wrote a book
called Touching the Void, a harrowing account of near death in the
Peruvian Andes. It got good reviews but, only a modest success,
it was soon forgotten. Then, a decade later, a strange thing happened.
Jon Krakauer wrote Into Thin Air, another book about a mountain-climbing
tragedy, which became a publishing sensation. Suddenly Touching
the Void started to sell again.
-
Random House rushed out a new edition to keep up with demand. Booksellers
began to promote it next to their Into Thin Air displays, and sales
rose further. A revised paperback edition, which came out in January,
spent 14 weeks on the New York Times bestseller list. That same
month, IFC Films released a docudrama of the story to critical acclaim.
Now Touching the Void outsells Into Thin Air more than two to one.
-
What happened? In short, Amazon.com recommendations. The online
bookseller's software noted patterns in buying behavior and suggested
that readers who liked Into Thin Air would also like Touching the
Void. People took the suggestion, agreed wholeheartedly, wrote rhapsodic
reviews. More sales, more algorithm-fueled recommendations, and
the positive feedback loop kicked in.
-
Particularly notable is that when Krakauer's book hit shelves, Simpson's
was nearly out of print. A few years ago, readers of Krakauer would
never even have learned about Simpson's book - and if they had,
they wouldn't have been able to find it. Amazon changed that. It
created the Touching the Void phenomenon by combining infinite shelf
space with real-time information about buying trends and public
opinion. The result: rising demand for an obscure book.
-
This is not just a virtue of online booksellers; it is an example
of an entirely new economic model for the media and entertainment
industries, one that is just beginning to show its power. Unlimited
selection is revealing truths about what consumers want and how
they want to get it in service after service, from DVDs at Netflix
to music videos on Yahoo! Launch to songs in the iTunes Music Store
and Rhapsody. People are going deep into the catalog, down the long,
long list of available titles, far past what's available at Blockbuster
Video, Tower Records, and Barnes & Noble. And the more they
find, the more they like. As they wander further from the beaten
path, they discover their taste is not as mainstream as they thought
(or as they had been led to believe by marketing, a lack of alternatives,
and a hit-driven culture).
-
An analysis of the sales data and trends from these services and
others like them shows that the emerging digital entertainment economy
is going to be radically different from today's mass market. If
the 20th- century entertainment industry was about hits, the 21st
will be equally about misses.
-
For too long we've been suffering the tyranny of lowest-common-denominator
fare, subjected to brain-dead summer blockbusters and manufactured
pop. Why? Economics. Many of our assumptions about popular taste
are actually artifacts of poor supply-and-demand matching - a market
response to inefficient distribution.
-
The main problem, if that's the word, is that we live in the physical
world and, until recently, most of our entertainment media did,
too. But that world puts two dramatic limitations on our entertainment.
- continued...
|
-
|
|
|
-
The
first is the need to find local audiences. An average movie theater
will not show a film unless it can attract at least 1,500 people
over a two-week run; that's essentially the rent for a screen. An
average record store needs to sell at least two copies of a CD per
year to make it worth carrying; that's the rent for a half inch
of shelf space. And so on for DVD rental shops, videogame stores,
booksellers, and newsstands.
-
In each case, retailers will carry only content that can generate
sufficient demand to earn its keep. But each can pull only from
a limited local population - perhaps a 10-mile radius for a typical
movie theater, less than that for music and bookstores, and even
less (just a mile or two) for video rental shops. It's not enough
for a great documentary to have a potential national audience of
half a million; what matters is how many it has in the northern
part of Rockville, Maryland, and among the mall shoppers of Walnut
Creek, California.
-
There is plenty of great entertainment with potentially large, even
rapturous, national audiences that cannot clear that bar. For instance,
The Triplets of Belleville, a critically acclaimed film that was
nominated for the best animated feature Oscar this year, opened
on just six screens nationwide. An even more striking example is
the plight of Bollywood in America. Each year, India's film industry
puts out more than 800 feature films. There are an estimated 1.7
million Indians in the US. Yet the top-rated (according to Amazon's
Internet Movie Database) Hindi-language film, Lagaan: Once Upon
a Time in India, opened on just two screens, and it was one of only
a handful of Indian films to get any US distribution at all. In
the tyranny of physical space, an audience too thinly spread is
the same as no audience at all.
-
The other constraint of the physical world is physics itself. The
radio spectrum can carry only so many stations, and a coaxial cable
so many TV channels. And, of course, there are only 24 hours a day
of programming. The curse of broadcast technologies is that they
are profligate users of limited resources. The result is yet another
instance of having to aggregate large audiences in one geographic
area - another high bar, above which only a fraction of potential
content rises.
-
The past century of entertainment has offered an easy solution to
these constraints. Hits fill theaters, fly off shelves, and keep
listeners and viewers from touching their dials and remotes. Nothing
wrong with that; indeed, sociologists will tell you that hits are
hardwired into human psychology, the combinatorial effect of conformity
and word of mouth. And to be sure, a healthy share of hits earn
their place: Great songs, movies, and books attract big, broad audiences.
-
But most of us want more than just hits. Everyone's taste departs
from the mainstream somewhere, and the more we explore alternatives,
the more we're drawn to them. Unfortunately, in recent decades such
alternatives have been pushed to the fringes by pumped-up marketing
vehicles built to order by industries that desperately need them.
-
Hit-driven economics is a creation of an age without enough room
to carry everything for everybody. Not enough shelf space for all
the CDs, DVDs, and games produced. Not enough screens to show all
the available movies. Not enough channels to broadcast all the TV
programs, not enough radio waves to play all the music created,
and not enough hours in the day to squeeze everything out through
either of those sets of slots.
-
This is the world of scarcity. Now, with online distribution and
retail, we are entering a world of abundance. And the differences
are profound.
-
To see how, meet Robbie Vann-Adibé, the CEO of Ecast, a digital
jukebox company whose barroom players offer more than 150,000 tracks
- and some surprising usage statistics. He hints at them with a
question that visitors invariably get wrong: "What percentage
of the top 10,000 titles in any online media store (Netflix, iTunes,
Amazon, or any other) will rent or sell at least once a month?"
-
Most people guess 20 percent, and for good reason: We've been trained
to think that way. The 80-20 rule, also known as Pareto's principle
(after Vilfredo Pareto, an Italian economist who devised the concept
in 1906), is all around us. Only 20 percent of major studio films
will be hits. Same for TV shows, games, and mass-market books -
20 percent all. The odds are even worse for major-label CDs, where
fewer than 10 percent are profitable, according to the Recording
Industry Association of America.
-
But the right answer, says Vann-Adibé, is 99 percent. There
is demand for nearly every one of those top 10,000 tracks. He sees
it in his own jukebox statistics; each month, thousands of people
put in their dollars for songs that no traditional jukebox anywhere
has ever carried.
-
People get Vann-Adibé's question wrong because the answer
is counterintuitive in two ways. The first is we forget that the
20 percent rule in the entertainment industry is about hits, not
sales of any sort. We're stuck in a hit-driven mindset - we think
that if something isn't a hit, it won't make money and so won't
return the cost of its production. We assume, in other words, that
only hits deserve to exist. But Vann-Adibé, like executives
at iTunes, Amazon, and Netflix, has discovered that the "misses"
usually make money, too. And because there are so many more of them,
that money can add up quickly to a huge new market.
-
With no shelf space to pay for and, in the case of purely digital
services like iTunes, no manufacturing costs and hardly any distribution
fees, a miss sold is just another sale, with the same margins as
a hit. A hit and a miss are on equal economic footing, both just
entries in a database called up on demand, both equally worthy of
being carried. Suddenly, popularity no longer has a monopoly on
profitability.
-
|
-
|
|
|
-
The
second reason for the wrong answer is that the industry has a poor
sense of what people want. Indeed, we have a poor sense of what
we want. We assume, for instance, that there is little demand for
the stuff that isn't carried by Wal-Mart and other major retailers;
if people wanted it, surely it would be sold. The rest, the bottom
80 percent, must be subcommercial at best.
-
But as egalitarian as Wal-Mart may seem, it is actually extraordinarily
elitist. Wal-Mart must sell at least 100,000 copies of a CD to cover
its retail overhead and make a sufficient profit; less than 1 percent
of CDs do that kind of volume. What about the 60,000 people who
would like to buy the latest Fountains of Wayne or Crystal Method
album, or any other nonmainstream fare? They have to go somewhere
else. Bookstores, the megaplex, radio, and network TV can be equally
demanding. We equate mass market with quality and demand, when in
fact it often just represents familiarity, savvy advertising, and
broad if somewhat shallow appeal. What do we really want? We're
only just discovering, but it clearly starts with more.
To get a sense of our true taste, unfiltered by the economics of
scarcity, look at Rhapsody, a subscription-based streaming music
service (owned by RealNetworks) that currently offers more than
735,000 tracks.
-
Chart Rhapsody's monthly statistics and you get a "power law"
demand curve that looks much like any record store's, with huge
appeal for the top tracks, tailing off quickly for less popular
ones. But a really interesting thing happens once you dig below
the top 40,000 tracks, which is about the amount of the fluid inventory
(the albums carried that will eventually be sold) of the average
real-world record store. Here, the Wal-Marts of the world go to
zero - either they don't carry any more CDs, or the few potential
local takers for such fringy fare never find it or never even enter
the store.
-
The Rhapsody demand, however, keeps going. Not only is every one
of Rhapsody's top 100,000 tracks streamed at least once each month,
the same is true for its top 200,000, top 300,000, and top 400,000.
As fast as Rhapsody adds tracks to its library, those songs find
an audience, even if it's just a few people a month, somewhere in
the country.
-
This is the Long Tail.
-
You can find everything out there on the Long Tail. There's the
back catalog, older albums still fondly remembered by longtime fans
or rediscovered by new ones. There are live tracks, B-sides, remixes,
even (gasp) covers. There are niches by the thousands, genre within
genre within genre: Imagine an entire Tower Records devoted to '80s
hair bands or ambient dub. There are foreign bands, once priced
out of reach in the Import aisle, and obscure bands on even more
obscure labels, many of which don't have the distribution clout
to get into Tower at all.
-
Oh sure, there's also a lot of crap. But there's a lot of crap hiding
between the radio tracks on hit albums, too. People have to skip
over it on CDs, but they can more easily avoid it online, since
the collaborative filters typically won't steer you to it. Unlike
the CD, where each crap track costs perhaps one-twelfth of a $15
album price, online it just sits harmlessly on some server, ignored
in a market that sells by the song and evaluates tracks on their
own merit.
-
What's really amazing about the Long Tail is the sheer size of it.
Combine enough nonhits on the Long Tail and you've got a market
bigger than the hits. Take books: The average Barnes & Noble
carries 130,000 titles. Yet more than half of Amazon's book sales
come from outside its top 130,000 titles. Consider the implication:
If the Amazon statistics are any guide, the market for books that
are not even sold in the average bookstore is larger than the market
for those that are (see "Anatomy of the Long Tail"). In
other words, the potential book market may be twice as big as it
appears to be, if only we can get over the economics of scarcity.
Venture capitalist and former music industry consultant Kevin Laws
puts it this way: "The biggest money is in the smallest sales."
-
The same is true for all other aspects of the entertainment business,
to one degree or another. Just compare online and offline businesses:
The average Blockbuster carries fewer than 3,000 DVDs. Yet a fifth
of Netflix rentals are outside its top 3,000 titles. Rhapsody streams
more songs each month beyond its top 10,000 than it does its top
10,000. In each case, the market that lies outside the reach of
the physical retailer is big and getting bigger.
-
When you think about it, most successful businesses on the Internet
are about aggregating the Long Tail in one way or another. Google,
for instance, makes most of its money off small advertisers (the
long tail of advertising), and eBay is mostly tail as well - niche
and one-off products. By overcoming the limitations of geography
and scale, just as Rhapsody and Amazon have, Google and eBay have
discovered new markets and expanded existing ones.
-
This is the power of the Long Tail. The companies at the vanguard
of it are showing the way with three big lessons. Call them the
new rules for the new entertainment economy.
-
|
-
|

- |
|
_
Rule 1: Make everything available
-
If you love documentaries, Blockbuster is not for you. Nor is any
other video store - there are too many documentaries, and they sell
too poorly to justify stocking more than a few dozen of them on physical
shelves. Instead, you'll want to join Netflix, which offers more than
a thousand documentaries - because it can. Such profligacy is giving
a boost to the documentary business; last year, Netflix accounted
for half of all US rental revenue for Capturing the Friedmans, a documentary
about a family destroyed by allegations of pedophilia.
-
Netflix CEO Reed Hastings, who's something of a documentary buff,
took this newfound clout to PBS, which had produced Daughter From
Danang, a documentary about the children of US soldiers and Vietnamese
women. In 2002, the film was nominated for an Oscar and was named
best documentary at Sundance, but PBS had no plans to release it on
DVD. Hastings offered to handle the manufacturing and distribution
if PBS would make it available as a Netflix exclusive. Now Daughter
From Danang consistently ranks in the top 15 on Netflix documentary
charts. That amounts to a market of tens of thousands of documentary
renters that did not otherwise exist.
-
There are any number of equally attractive genres and subgenres neglected
by the traditional DVD channels: foreign films, anime, independent
movies, British television dramas, old American TV sitcoms. These
underserved markets make up a big chunk of Netflix rentals. Bollywood
alone accounts for nearly 100,000 rentals each month. The availability
of offbeat content drives new customers to Netflix - and anything
that cuts the cost of customer acquisition is gold for a subscription
business. Thus the company's first lesson: Embrace niches.
-
|
- |
|
|
-
Netflix
has made a good business out of what's unprofitable fare in movie
theaters and video rental shops because it can aggregate dispersed
audiences. It doesn't matter if the several thousand people who
rent Doctor Who episodes each month are in one city or spread, one
per town, across the country - the economics are the same to Netflix.
It has, in short, broken the tyranny of physical space. What matters
is not where customers are, or even how many of them are seeking
a particular title, but only that some number of them exist, anywhere.
-
As a result, almost anything is worth offering on the off chance
it will find a buyer. This is the opposite of the way the entertainment
industry now thinks. Today, the decision about whether or when to
release an old film on DVD is based on estimates of demand, availability
of extras such as commentary and additional material, and marketing
opportunities such as anniversaries, awards, and generational windows
(Disney briefly rereleases its classics every 10 years or so as
a new wave of kids come of age). It's a high bar, which is why only
a fraction of movies ever made are available on DVD.
-
That model may make sense for the true classics, but it's way too
much fuss for everything else. The Long Tail approach, by contrast,
is to simply dump huge chunks of the archive onto bare-bones DVDs,
without any extras or marketing. Call it the Silver Series and charge
half the price. Same for independent films. This year, nearly 6,000
movies were submitted to the Sundance Film Festival. Of those, 255
were accepted, and just two dozen have been picked up for distribution;
to see the others, you had to be there. Why not release all 255
on DVD each year as part of a discount Sundance Series?In a Long
Tail economy, it's more expensive to evaluate than to release. Just
do it!
-
The same is true for the music industry. It should be securing the
rights to release all the titles in all the back catalogs as quickly
as it can - thoughtlessly, automatically, and at industrial scale.
(This is one of those rare moments where the world needs more lawyers,
not fewer.) So too for videogames. Retro gaming, including simulators
of classic game consoles that run on modern PCs, is a growing phenomenon
driven by the nostalgia of the first joystick generation. Game publishers
could release every title as a 99-cent download three years after
its release - no support, no guarantees, no packaging.
-
All this, of course, applies equally to books. Already, we're seeing
a blurring of the line between in and out of print. Amazon and other
networks of used booksellers have made it almost as easy to find
and buy a second-hand book as it is a new one. By divorcing bookselling
from geography, these networks create a liquid market at low volume,
dramatically increasing both their own business and the overall
demand for used books. Combine that with the rapidly dropping costs
of print-on-demand technologies and it's clear why any book should
always be available. Indeed, it is a fair bet that children today
will grow up never knowing the meaning of out of print.
-
Rule 2: Cut the price in half. Now lower it.
-
Thanks to the success of Apple's iTunes, we now have a standard
price for a downloaded track: 99 cents. But is it the right one?
-
Ask the labels and they'll tell you it's too low: Even though 99
cents per track works out to about the same price as a CD, most
consumers just buy a track or two from an album online, rather than
the full CD. In effect, online music has seen a return to the singles-driven
business of the 1950s. So from a label perspective, consumers should
pay more for the privilege of purchasing à la carte to compensate
for the lost album revenue.
-
Ask consumers, on the other hand, and they'll tell you that 99 cents
is too high. It is, for starters, 99 cents more than Kazaa. But
piracy aside, 99 cents violates our innate sense of economic justice:
If it clearly costs less for a record label to deliver a song online,
with no packaging, manufacturing, distribution, or shelf space overheads,
why shouldn't the price be less, too?
-
Surprisingly enough, there's been little good economic analysis
on what the right price for online music should be. The main reason
for this is that pricing isn't set by the market today but by the
record label demi-cartel. Record companies charge a wholesale price
of around 65 cents per track, leaving little room for price experimentation
by the retailers.
-
That wholesale price is set to roughly match the price of CDs, to
avoid dreaded "channel conflict." The labels fear that
if they price online music lower, their CD retailers (still the
vast majority of the business) will revolt or, more likely, go out
of business even more quickly than they already are. In either case,
it would be a serious disruption of the status quo, which terrifies
the already spooked record companies. No wonder they're doing price
calculations with an eye on the downsides in their traditional CD
business rather than the upside in their new online business.
But what if the record labels stopped playing defense? A brave new
look at the economics of music would calculate what it really costs
to simply put a song on an iTunes server and adjust pricing accordingly.
The results are surprising.
-
Take away the unnecessary costs of the retail channel - CD manufacturing,
distribution, and retail overheads. That leaves the costs of finding,
making, and marketing music. Keep them as they are, to ensure that
the people on the creative and label side of the business make as
much as they currently do. For a popular album that sells 300,000
copies, the creative costs work out to about $7.50 per disc, or
around 60 cents a track. Add to that the actual cost of delivering
music online, which is mostly the cost of building and maintaining
the online service rather than the negligible storage and bandwidth
costs. Current price tag: around 17 cents a track. By this calculation,
hit music is overpriced by 25 percent online - it should cost just
79 cents a track, reflecting the savings of digital delivery.
-
Putting channel conflict aside for the moment, if the incremental
cost of making content that was originally produced for physical
distribution available online is low, the price should be, too.
Price according to digital costs, not physical ones.
-
All this good news for consumers doesn't have to hurt the industry.
When you lower prices, people tend to buy more. Last year, Rhapsody
did an experiment in elastic demand that suggested it could be a
lot more. For a brief period, the service offered tracks at 99 cents,
79 cents, and 49 cents. Although the 49-cent tracks were only half
the price of the 99-cent tracks, Rhapsody sold three times as many
of them.
-
|
-
|

-
|
-
Since
the record companies still charged 65 cents a track - and Rhapsody
paid another 8 cents per track to the copyright-holding publishers
- Rhapsody lost money on that experiment (but, as the old joke goes,
made it up in volume). Yet much of the content on the Long Tail
is older material that has already made back its money (or been
written off for failing to do so): music from bands that had little
record company investment and was thus cheap to make, or live recordings,
remixes, and other material that came at low cost.
-
Such "misses" cost less to make available than hits, so
why not charge even less for them? Imagine if prices declined the
further you went down the Tail, with popularity (the market) effectively
dictating pricing. All it would take is for the labels to lower
the wholesale price for the vast majority of their content not in
heavy rotation; even a two- or three-tiered pricing structure could
work wonders. And because so much of that content is not available
in record stores, the risk of channel conflict is greatly diminished.
The lesson: Pull consumers down the tail with lower prices.
-
How low should the labels go? The answer comes by examining the
psychology of the music consumer. The choice facing fans is not
how many songs to buy from iTunes and Rhapsody, but how many songs
to buy rather than download for free from Kazaa and other peer-to-peer
networks. Intuitively, consumers know that free music is not really
free: Aside from any legal risks, it's a time-consuming hassle to
build a collection that way. Labeling is inconsistent, quality varies,
and an estimated 30 percent of tracks are defective in one way or
another. As Steve Jobs put it at the iTunes Music Store launch,
you may save a little money downloading from Kazaa, but "you're
working for under minimum wage." And what's true for music
is doubly true for movies and games, where the quality of pirated
products can be even more dismal, viruses are a risk, and downloads
take so much longer.
-
So free has a cost: the psychological value of convenience. This
is the "not worth it" moment where the wallet opens. The
exact amount is an impossible calculus involving the bank balance
of the average college student multiplied by their available free
time. But imagine that for music, at least, it's around 20 cents
a track. That, in effect, is the dividing line between the commercial
world of the Long Tail and the underground. Both worlds will continue
to exist in parallel, but it's crucial for Long Tail thinkers to
exploit the opportunities between 20 and 99 cents to maximize their
share. By offering fair pricing, ease of use, and consistent quality,
you can compete with free.
-
Perhaps the best way to do that is to stop charging for individual
tracks at all. Danny Stein, whose private equity firm owns eMusic,
thinks the future of the business is to move away from the ownership
model entirely. With ubiquitous broadband, both wired and wireless,
more consumers will turn to the celestial jukebox of music services
that offer every track ever made, playable on demand. Some of those
tracks will be free to listeners and advertising-supported, like
radio. Others, like eMusic and Rhapsody, will be subscription services.
Today, digital music economics are dominated by the iPod, with its
notion of a paid-up library of personal tracks. But as the networks
improve, the comparative economic advantages of unlimited streamed
music, either financed by advertising or a flat fee (infinite choice
for $9.99 a month), may shift the market that way. And drive another
nail in the coffin of the retail music model.
-
Rule 3: Help me find it
-
In 1997, an entrepreneur named Michael Robertson started what looked
like a classic Long Tail business. Called MP3.com, it let anyone
upload music files that would be available to all. The idea was
the service would bypass the record labels, allowing artists to
connect directly to listeners. MP3.com would make its money in fees
paid by bands to have their music promoted on the site. The tyranny
of the labels would be broken, and a thousand flowers would bloom.
-
Putting aside the fact that many people actually used the service
to illegally upload and share commercial tracks, leading the labels
to sue MP3.com, the model failed at its intended purpose, too. Struggling
bands did not, as a rule, find new audiences, and independent music
was not transformed. Indeed, MP3.com got a reputation for being
exactly what it was: an undifferentiated mass of mostly bad music
that deserved its obscurity.
-
The problem with MP3.com was that it was only Long Tail. It didn't
have license agreements with the labels to offer mainstream fare
or much popular commercial music at all. Therefore, there was no
familiar point of entry for consumers, no known quantity from which
further exploring could begin.
-
Offering only hits is no better. Think of the struggling video-on-demand
services of the cable companies. Or think of Movielink, the feeble
video download service run by the studios. Due to overcontrolling
providers and high costs, they suffer from limited content: in most
cases just a few hundred recent releases. There's not enough choice
to change consumer behavior, to become a real force in the entertainment
economy.
-
By contrast, the success of Netflix, Amazon, and the commercial
music services shows that you need both ends of the curve. Their
huge libraries of less-mainstream fare set them apart, but hits
still matter in attracting consumers in the first place. Great Long
Tail businesses can then guide consumers further afield by following
the contours of their likes and dislikes, easing their exploration
of the unknown.
-
For instance, the front screen of Rhapsody features Britney Spears,
unsurprisingly. Next to the listings of her work is a box of "similar
artists." Among them is Pink. If you click on that and are
pleased with what you hear, you may do the same for Pink's similar
artists, which include No Doubt. And on No Doubt's page, the list
includes a few "followers" and "influencers,"
the last of which includes the Selecter, a 1980s ska band from Coventry,
England. In three clicks, Rhapsody may have enticed a Britney Spears
fan to try an album that can hardly be found in a record store.
-
Rhapsody does this with a combination of human editors and genre
guides. But Netflix, where 60 percent of rentals come from recommendations,
and Amazon do this with collaborative filtering, which uses the
browsing and purchasing patterns of users to guide those who follow
them ("Customers who bought this also bought ..."). In
each, the aim is the same: Use recommendations to drive demand down
the Long Tail.
-
This is the difference between push and pull, between broadcast
and personalized taste. Long Tail business can treat consumers as
individuals, offering mass customization as an alternative to mass-market
fare.
-
The advantages are spread widely. For the entertainment industry
itself, recommendations are a remarkably efficient form of marketing,
allowing smaller films and less-mainstream music to find an audience.
For consumers, the improved signal-to-noise ratio that comes from
following a good recommendation encourages exploration and can reawaken
a passion for music and film, potentially creating a far larger
entertainment market overall. (The average Netflix customer rents
seven DVDs a month, three times the rate at brick-and-mortar stores.)
And the cultural benefit of all of this is much more diversity,
reversing the blanding effects of a century of distribution scarcity
and ending the tyranny of the hit.
-
Such is the power of the Long Tail. Its time has come.-
-
Chris Anderson (canderson@wiredmag.com) is Wired's editor in chief.
- |
-
|
|
|
| |
| - |
| |
| |
| |
|
-
|