Long Tail Marketing - YouTube

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Long Tail Marketing: More marketing videos at www.blinkback.co.uk/blog
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Hi, I'm David Kilkelly.
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Welcome to BlinkBack Video Marketing.
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I thought today I'd talk to you a little bit about the long tail and why I think it's a
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really interesting idea, and how it affects online markets.
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So the long tail basically was an idea that was developed by a guy called Chris Anderson
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some years ago, and what it is is a way of understanding how the internet enables niche
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markets.
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And when you understand how that works, you can tap those niche markets and make use of
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them.
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So let's have a look at an example to see how this works.
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So let's take a look at something like Waterstones.
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Okay, here's Waterstones, a very famous High Street bookstore, and they stock a wide range
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of different books.
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So they'll stock books on gardening, and hobbies, and novels, and all sorts of different things
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but their shelf space is ultimately limited.
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So if I go into Waterstones and I want a book on gardening, I can find probably several
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books on gardening, but I can't necessarily find hundreds of books on gardening on lots
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of different areas because they haven't got room to stock all of that, and it's not financially
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viable to them.
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If I go onto Amazon, then you can find pretty much anything that you want.
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Amazon is an online model where space doesn't really matter anymore.
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This is an Amazon bookstore, basically.
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This is the warehouse where Amazon stores its products.
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So you can see there that space isn't an issue.
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That's not the problem.
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So here's a book on Amazon called The Encyclopedia of Ornamental Grasses, so very niche, very
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specific area of gardening.
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And there'll be lots of different books on all of the different niche areas of gardening
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that you can get through Amazon are like that.
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If 1% of customers want to buy a book on ornamental grasses, then in a local area, that might
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just be five people.
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If 1% of a global market of customers want to buy a book on ornamental grasses, that
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could amount to thousands and thousands of people, so it makes it worthwhile for Amazon
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to stock that book.
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I've got an interesting statistic that illustrates this.
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It's quite an old one, but in 2008, 36.7% of Amazon sales were made up of niche markets,
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niche book markets.
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If you look at this graph, this is what the long tail looks like and you can see here
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in the front part of the graph, this is where Waterstones would stock most of their stuff.
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So this is the bestseller list and all the things that would fit on the shelves at Waterstones,
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the things that are popular that everyone wants to buy.
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But this bit here is the bit that they can't stock.
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This tail basically goes on forever into an ever-decreasing number of smaller niches,
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and this is where Waterstones can't really compete because they physically can't stock
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that number of books.
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Amazon don't have that problem.
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So if you take that idea and you apply it to a search function like Amazon Search or
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Google Search, you start to see how it works.
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If you're trying to compete for sales on broad search terms, so on terms like coffee, or
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shoes, or gardening, you're never going to be able to cut through the noise of everybody
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else competing for those search terms.
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And if we look back at our graph, this area here are those broad search terms.
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If you look down into more increasingly niche search terms, so if you're selling products
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in those niche areas, then the small number of people who are searching for terms like
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ornamental grasses will come across your site.
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There's less competition in this area and higher conversions, whereas in this area there's
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much greater competition and much lower conversions.
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Once you've opened that door in that niche area, you can steal attention away from the
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big players, and that's valuable not just in terms of a sale but in terms of building
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your brand and your online presence, as well.
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So I hope you found that interesting.
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If you can find that really, really specific thing about your business or that really,
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really niche item that you sell and use that just to cut through that noise, then that
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could add some real benefit and some real value to your business online.
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My name's David Kilkelly, and this is BlinkBack Video Marketing.