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Good-bye, Long Tail



Interesting (and long-awaited) article in the Wall St. Journal on Borders' decision to reduce the number of titles it stocks in favor of giving fewer titles more prominent display. WSJ is a subscription site. The article is dated March 12 and is titled "Borders Tries About-face on Shclves." The byline is Jeffrey Trachtenberg.

From the article:
"In a radical move aimed at jump-starting sales, the nation's second-largest book retailer is sharply increasing the number of titles it displays on shelves with the covers face-out. Because that takes up more room than the traditional spine-out style, the new approach will require a typical Borders superstore to shrink its number of titles by 5% to 10%."

The article goes on to note that tests show that when inventory is reduced and fewer titles are supported (but more aggressively), sales rise by 9%. Commentators contacted by the reporter note that people "don't want choice" and that Borders' decision will favor larger publishers.

This is the attention economy at work. What a windfall open access is for Elsevier and Springer.

Joe Esposito