So Much For The Long Tail…
I have a ridiculous number of channels available to me on DirectTV. And I pay a pretty price for them. Most I could care less about. The only thing I care about is rugby – which, to get, I need to subscribe to every petty, worthless piece of crap TV programming created in the last decade.
This weekend there is a really big game – the New Zealand All Blacks, the #1 ranked team in the world take on Ireland – who have never beaten them. There are normally two options for viewing. First, Pay Per View. Having paid a just ludicrous amount for the privilege of all that programming, I need to pay even more to watch the game under this scenario. The other option is Setanta Sports – an Irish sports channel way down the line-up at 617. Being an Irish-based channel you would think they’d cover the game. But no, instead we are going to get France vs. Canada – what is likely to be a boring and sad whitewash. What were they thinking?
Broadcasters don’t get the long tail. Moreover, they don’t get what customers want. They play to the masses, not to the long tail. But they have the bandwidth and technology to do it. What they are doing is driving people – like me – to companies that get the long tail. Companies like NetFlix and MediaZone.
So, instead of paying for DirectTV and Setanta Sports I’m going to subscribe to MediaZone and get the games in all their 60’s Godzilla movie style. It’ll suck. I’ll listen to the games live on the radio at the same time to account for the buffering issues and shakes and jitters. But what I won’t do is pay for lousy programming decisions and a complete lack of understanding of what the consumer wants. I don’t want to pay for an entire season of sports but only get a fraction of the games being played. I want to get the season and the games.
This is the power afforded to me by the Web. Those that get the Long Tail will survive. Those that don’t will die – slowly for sure, but eventually technology and smart marketers will catch them.
Kiwis Want Kiwis Back…
Handy Reference Site
The Last Word From Forbes
“Let me make a prediction. Five years from now, the blogosphere will have developed into a powerful economic engine that has all but driven newspapers into oblivion, has morphed (thanks to cell phone cameras) into a video medium that challenges television news, and has created a whole new group of major companies and media superstars. Billions of dollars will be made by those prescient enough to either get on board or invest in these companies. At this point, the industry will then undergo its first shakeout, with the loss of perhaps several million blogs though the overall industry will continue to grow at a steady pace.And, at about that moment, Forbes will announce that the blogosphere is the Next Big Thing for investors.”