Posted on September 16, 2009 by ssmith
The “long neck” refers to the 5% of your web content responsible for 80% of your web visits. The “long tail” refers to the bulk of your web pages that get very few visits. The long tail is exemplified by e-commerce websites efficiently offering many unique low-traffic items.
There may be tens of thousands of pages in the long tail. By nature they are not important enough to be linked directly from your main page or navigational menus. These items may be too specific or numerous for global navigation, but when taken together too valuable to ignore. Ways to get users to long tail items are increasingly important to e-commerce sites like Amazon. Yet for many sites the long tail poses challenges.
Once navigational menus and links are focused on Top Tasks, routes to important long tail items may be less obvious – which makes links to Top Tasks more visible. But if an institution delivers value in the long tail it needs to be managed in different ways. Here are some ways to deal with it:
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