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KMPS - Now mixing in older country hits from the 1990's and 2k

It looks like this change is pretty recent. Do you guys think it's enough to pull away a few wolf listeners?

KKWF is shooting for the younger crowd (18-34), so I don't think they'll take much of their audience away. On the other hand, KMPS reaching back and playing 90's and 00's might raise there overall performance in the 34 to 54 demographic, which is the only audience they can have a chance at.
 
Sounds like they've "Click'd" KMPS. Thing is, Country today compared to then is like night and day - just like it was in the '80s compared to the 'traditional' artists. I think it might hit the upper end of 25-54 a little bit, but that's all.
 
Sounds like they've "Click'd" KMPS. Thing is, Country today compared to then is like night and day - just like it was in the '80s compared to the 'traditional' artists. I think it might hit the upper end of 25-54 a little bit, but that's all.

It seems like it would almost make more sense to cap the playlist at the year 2010; capture the upper end of 25-54 and leave out some of big names on the current country billboard. It just seems like putting a 1990's Reba track next to a Florida Georgia Line song would lead to confusion for the listener.
These folks seem to make it work, but it might be too strange of a concept for Seattle.
http://www.931kmkt.com/

"Click'd" is a good description here ;) I love that!
 
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This could help them. KKWF has a bit more gold in their library. Down here, KWJJ has about the same amount of older material and is now leading the country battle. KUPL was ahead, but they've since dropped off, while KWJJ has held steady.
 
This could help them. KKWF has a bit more gold in their library. Down here, KWJJ has about the same amount of older material and is now leading the country battle. KUPL was ahead, but they've since dropped off, while KWJJ has held steady.

Thanks for sharing! There might just be a demand for that older demo if other stations (OUTSIDE of traditional markets) are trying it. With the genre of "country" constantly reinventing itself (and going in many different styles and directions) it seems logical enough to have two country stations in one market trying to pick up different ends of that spectrum.
 
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Only thing is if you're looking to improve in a demo, 49+ isn't the one to work on. Study after study shows us old f@rts are less swayed by advertising so it's harder to sell.
 
This could help them. KKWF has a bit more gold in their library. Down here, KWJJ has about the same amount of older material and is now leading the country battle. KUPL was ahead, but they've since dropped off, while KWJJ has held steady.

Actually, KWJJ rebounded after reinstating its morning team.
 
You may be right, but hasn't that been quite a while, well before KUPL relaunched as The Bull? Since I've been down here, KUPL was the top country station, but they've been bouncing around an have dropped below KWj, whichha held steady
 
C'mon, guys, let's keep this focused on Seattle. Portland has a completely different market makeup and any discussion of stations there is irrelevant to this thread.
 
I think it would be extremely interesting to know what the distribution of listeners actually looks like around the Seattle metropolitan area compared to a few decades ago. The old KMPS-AM probably was not trying to target listeners in Seattle proper like KMPS can do today.
 
I think it would be extremely interesting to know what the distribution of listeners actually looks like around the Seattle metropolitan area compared to a few decades ago.
What do you mean by distribution? Where they live? Where they listen? Explain, please.

The old KMPS-AM probably was not trying to target listeners in Seattle proper like KMPS can do today.
I'd have to challenge that assertion. Back then there were stations targeting just Seattle, just Tacoma, etc. Now the market is the entire MSA.
 
You may be right, but hasn't that been quite a while, well before KUPL relaunched as The Bull? Since I've been down here, KUPL was the top country station, but they've been bouncing around an have dropped below KWj, whichha held steady

KUPL became The Bull two years ago, last January. Mike and Amy returned to The Wolf just about exactly one year ago. Now, back to our regularly scheduled thread.
 
I think it would be extremely interesting to know what the distribution of listeners actually looks like around the Seattle metropolitan area compared to a few decades ago. The old KMPS-AM probably was not trying to target listeners in Seattle proper like KMPS can do today.

KMPS-AM was not exactly a legacy Country station. It had been KOL-AM/FM until a sale turned it into KMPS/KEUT but KEUT was short-lived and soon became KMPS-FM. If there was an AM legacy Country station in Seattle, it was KAYO.
 
My first commercial gig in Radio, Country KAYO! I was 16 years old and absolutely HATED country music, but I guess sounded convincing enough to get the gig. I never told any of my friends that I was working on the air at KAYO. Looking back, I do appreciate that the PD, Ben Payton took a chance on a kid still in high school and gave me increasing responsibilities. Even today, I remember stopping by the big cork board in the hallway outside the sales office to see if my paycheck was there. Sometimes it was, other times delayed for another week. It used to bother me occasionally that Sales always got paid first and if anything else was left over, air talent got paid on time. But honestly, I knew a 16 year old kid lucky enough to be working on the air doesn't have a reason to complain.
 
I remember the "rush" when checks came out to get down to Seafirst bank. First few lucky depositors had a better shot that the checks would clear!
 
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