Just in time for another controversy over powerlaw statistics (wheee!), I'm delighted to announce that the paperback version of The Long Tail will be published next week and is now available for preorder.
What's new? Well, along with a new cover, lower price and the usual corrections and updates, it's longer: there's an epilogue on the response to the book (pro and con) and a whole new chapter on Long Tail Marketing.
It's slightly ironic that this new chapter wasn't in the book in the first place, since the marketing implications of the Long Tail are the #1 thing I've been asked to speak about since its publication. But no worries: that just means that I've had more time to think about it ;-)
The marketing chapter is based on one of the overlooked things about the LT: if you're selling things, you don't necessarily need to massively expand your product range to tap LT markets. You can instead just reach the "long tail of customers", which is to say all the potential pockets of demand that don't necessarily lie within your normal marketing channels. This is the smaller potential customers, the ones you don't know about, the ones you never considered and the ones who didn't even think they were potential customers until they heard about your products from someone they know.
The new chapter is subtitled "How to sell where 'selling' doesn’t work" and includes examples that range from how Dell clawed back from its "Dell Hell" customer backlash to the tactical decisions that led Microsoft to let thousand of their employees blog, essentially distributing the PR function to regular folks in the bowels of the company.
For a glimpse of how this form of bottoms-up vs top-down marketing works, here's an earlier post on what I called "Long Tail PR: how to do PR without a press release (or the press)"



Looking forward to the marketing chapter Chris. I agree that many companies (online retailers in particular) seem to think that only course of action to take in response to the long tail is to become an aggregator. Instead of taking advantage of the freedom to specialize, they're trying to hit as many niche markets as possible.
Posted by: Mat McCoy | July 03, 2008 at 06:34 AM
it's a shame you lost the tail on the new cover - that was cool
Posted by: john | July 07, 2008 at 11:11 PM
John,
There was no tail on the cover, at least in the US version. Perhaps you're thinking of one of the international editions?
Posted by: Chris Anderson | July 07, 2008 at 11:58 PM
thanks...
Kabin
Konteyner
Posted by: kabin | June 13, 2009 at 09:53 AM
Blog is one of the essential thing to build your PR and make your product know to all and get comments and reviews from different people, that way your product become marketable just in quick time.
Posted by: cheap computers | September 10, 2009 at 02:58 AM