The Longer Long Tail: How Endless Choice is Creating Unlimited Demand

The Longer Long Tail: How Endless Choice is Creating Unlimited Demand

by Chris Anderson (Author), Chris Anderson (Author)

Synopsis

What happens when there is almost unlimited choice? When everything becomes available to everyone? And when the combined value of the millions of items that only sell in small quantities equals or even exceeds the value of a handful of best-sellers? In this ground-breaking book, Chris Anderson shows that the future of business does not lie in hits - the high-volume end of a traditional demand curve - but in what used to be regarded as misses - the endlessly long tail of that same curve. As our world is transformed by the Internet and the near infinite choice it offers consumers, so traditional business models are being overturned and new truths revealed about what consumers want and how they want to get it. Chris Anderson first explored the Long Tail in an article in "Wired" magazine that has become one of the most influential business essays of our time. Now, in this eagerly anticipated book, he takes a closer look at the new economics of the Internet age, showing where business is going and exploring the huge opportunities that exist: for new producers, new e-tailers, and new tastemakers. He demonstrates how long tail economics apply to industries ranging from the toy business to advertising to kitchen appliances. He sets down the rules for operating in a long tail economy. And he provides a glimpse of a future that's already here.

$13.03

Quantity

2 in stock

More Information

Format: paperback
Publisher: Random House Business
Published:

ISBN 10: 1847940366
ISBN 13: 9781847940360
Book Overview: The new economics of culture and commerce

Media Reviews
The Long Tail has helped to reinterpret our world * The Times *
A smart, timely and oddly inspiring book * Time Out *
Snappily argued and thought-provoking * New Yorker *
Author Bio
Chris Anderson is Editor-in-Chief of Wired magazine, a position he took up in 2001. Since then he has led the magazine to five National Magazine Award nominations, winning the top prize for General Excellence in 2005, a year in which he was also named editor of the year by AdAge magazine. Previously, he was at the Economist, Nature, and Science magazines. He has worked as a researcher at Los Alamos and served as research assistant to the Chief Scientist of the Department of Transportation. He lives in Northern California with his wife and four children. He can be reached at www.thelongtail.com.