Book Review - The Long Tail
“The Long Tail” is one of those buzz-phrases I have heard time and time again in the past couple of years. In my ongoing pursuits to catch up with books that have been sitting on the New York Times list of bestsellers and to better under the culture we live in, I decided to read the book that seems to do the best and most thorough job of explaining this phenomenon. Written by Chris Anderson, editor in chief of Wired magazine, The Long Tail seeks to show “why the future of business is selling less of more.” While Anderson did not coin the phrase, he is the man primarily responsible for popularizing it (and, I suppose, for turning it into a proper noun rather than simply a descriptive phrase).
The Long Tail describes the business model prevalent in many Internet-based companies such as Amazon, eBay and Netflix. Where most brick and mortar companies have, my necessity, had to focus on selling only the few products that are bestsellers (the green portion of the graph), Internet-based retailers have been able to offer a staggering variety (the yellow portion). They have been able to sell low volume of an almost limitless number of products. The typical big box retailer, for example, stocks only a relatively small number of books and focuses on the books that will sell the greatest number. They seek to sell high volume of a small number of titles. Internet retailers, though, because they are not constrained by shelf space, can offer near-infinite selection. They are finding that the long tail is almost infinite and is steadily growing ever longer.
The Long Tail deals with 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.” This has drastically shifted our buying patterns. “Our growing affluence has allowed us to shift from being bargain shoppers to buying branded (or even unbranded) commodities to becoming mini-connoisseurs, flexing our taste with a thousand little indulgences that set us apart from others. We now engage in a host of new consumer behaviors that are described with intentionally oxymoronic terms: “massclusivity,” “slivercasting,” “mass customization.” These all point to the phenomenon of the Long Tail.
The Long Tail, then, seeks to show how consumer behavior changes in a market of infinite choice—a market that is no longer constrained by the difficulties inherent in having supply limited by logistics. The supply now exists for whatever demand we, as picky and increasingly particular consumers, can dream up. We live in a culture that is focused more and more on niches and less and less of hits and bestsellers. We do not necessarily want to write the book that sells best overall, but the book that sells best in the small niche that is most important to us. There is infinite opportunity for any of us to impact a niche.
I read this book not only to understand this phenomenon, but to think about how it impacts Christians. And I did not have to look far to make many applications. The chief of these was thinking about the concept of “a market of infinite choice.” As we becoming increasingly interested in niches rather than worldwide phenomena, it seems that this may impact the church. Think, for example, about the variety of Bibles available to us. There is a Bible for any person and for any niche, whether that be people who hunt, who enjoy sports, who are African American or who are teenage boys. We do not just want a Bible, but we want one that appeals within the niche. The same is true of churches, where we are already seeing more but smaller churches that seek to appeal not to everyone but to a particular group. We do not have to look far to find evidence of The Long Tail within the church. Whether this is good, bad or indifferent largely remains to be seen. But it is something we really should be aware of since much of the beauty of the church is in its variety. While culture may tempt us to gravitate towards those who share our interests and passions, the Bible directs us to those who share our faith, no matter what happens to interest them.
The Long Tail really is an interesting book and one that is very relevant to this culture. It is not a typical book dealing with the subject of economics, but is written in a way that is easy to understand and absorb. It describes a phenomenon I think the church would do well to understand.





Comments (7) »
1. Blake
January 30, 2007
11:49 AM
Thanks for putting the graph in your post—the whole concept would have been kind of foggy without that!
It is a beautiful thing that family backgrounds are of no importance for families to come together and worship at a church where they are all strongly convicted the Bible is preached and worship is conducted in a God-prescribed order. I don’t think it’s beautiful, though, when there is a ‘clique’ church that appeals to people’s culture and builds a congregation from that. What to do though? People want entertainment. It is very much a niche market available for people who are church shopping.
2. The Aspiring Theologian
January 30, 2007
11:58 AM
Very interesting. It seems to me that, with the ever increasing amount of choices and products available to the consumer, Christians today need more wisdom than ever to make the right choices. Many of these things offered in our rich culture are good things, but we also have an access to things much less beneficial to us. A good example is the Bibles: some of these Bibles are good translations, but other Bible choices are merely hyped books spawned from our culture - gender-nuetral Bibles, even Bibles translated into street slang.
As the Preacher says - vanity, all is vanity! There is nothing new anymore under the sun.
Albert Shepherd The Aspiring Theologian
Visit my blog: Knight of the Living God
3. Jim Crigler
January 30, 2007
12:08 PM
Hmm … Did the book deal directly with the notion that growing populations make niche marketing possible and profitable? When the planet’s population was 100 million, there probably wouldn’t have been sufficient demand for a book on, say, cascading style sheets, even if the technology had been available. But in a population that’s 2 orders of magnitude bigger, it’s something that can start to make sense.
4. Tim Challies
January 30, 2007
12:15 PM
“Did the book deal directly with the notion that growing populations make niche marketing possible and profitable?”
Not really, but it didn’t really need to, since this is already our reality. The Long Tail really functions when there is a large population faced with infinite choice. And the tail will continue to grow as the population and the choice increases.
5. Josh
January 30, 2007
3:59 PM
Tim how does this fit in with the way people look for churches these days? I mean I’ve heard of biker churches and cowboy churches and even gay churches…the obvious danger is that the gospel will be marginalized (I think we’re already seeing that in some instances.)
Josh “…the word of God is not bound.” —2 Timothy 2:9
6. Michael
January 30, 2007
10:28 PM
Tim, nice review. I visit your website almost daily and really enjoy the material. I would classify myself as newly interested in reformed theology, but trying to learn as fast as I am able. During the day, I’m a finance guy - so books like this interest me.
A few thoughts. 1. I think that with businesses like Amazon and Netflix, we see two events happening simultaneously: a shift in the demand curve and a shift in the supply curve. (Now you non-finance guys know how I feel when you use terms like “forensic”). The supply shift is due, as you said, to reduced barriers and lower costs of supply - Amazon does not have to rent a warehouse for all of these books. I personally am much more likely now to buy a book from Amazon or Monergism than my local Christian bookstore. Not sure if that’s good or bad, but it is a big change. 2. But there is also a shift in demand. I don’t use Netflix, but Amazon is great at this. They use algorithms, behavior analysis, recommendations and ratings. I am very prone to look at their recommendations for me based on my past purchases. I read the other reader’s reviews. Here’s the key - they are creating demand, or creating a market. 3. Regarding creating demand, I think the church is starting to do this is some ways, but not many. Yes, there are certainly the mega churches that are using entertainment and felt needs to create demand. I’m not talking about that really. I’m talking about niche ministries. In our local church in Houston (about 2,000 strong), the vast majority of ministries are geared to teens and women. As a man, my choices are limited to a sports ministry and a motorcycle club. Not interested in either. I wish I knew how to help change things.
Michael
7. francisco
January 30, 2007
10:44 PM