https://radioinsight.com/ross/172026/why-soft-ac-is-booming-now/
I read this article. Your thoughts?
I read this article. Your thoughts?
The growth of streaming services like Pandora and Spotify has likely brought new interest in the 45-64 demo which is probably less likely to use such services as is mentioned under "Adult formats are booming".
The radio pros, though, keep reminding us that their research shows radio being used by over 90 percent of Americans,
The radio pros never talk about time spent listening when they cite that figure.
The radio pros never talk about time spent listening when they cite that figure. Sure, just about everyone listens to radio a few minutes a week. But:
According to Arbitron and Nielsen data, radio TSL is down immensely since 2008. Persons 12+, daily usage:
2008: 2h 48m (According to the 2008 Arbitron Infinite Dial report)
2016: 1h 47m (According to the Q4 2016 Nielsen Total Audience report)
Presumably the drop is greatest among the younger listeners. In the 2016 report, Nielsen says those 50-64 use 48% more radio hours than those age 18-24.
The real motivation for this format, from what I can see, comes from the ratings success of several stations, including KISQ in San Francisco. They launched as The Breeze in April 2016. Then of course The Sound in Seattle last year. There's a lot of slicing and dicing of the upper portion of the demo going on right now.
What I haven't seem is solid revenue success. Until that's documented, it becomes primarily useful as a flanker format, and that's about it.
The growth of streaming services like Pandora and Spotify has likely brought new interest in the 45-64 demo which is probably less likely to use such services as is mentioned under "Adult formats are booming".
The idea that folks in the higher end of the sales demos (35-54) don't know how to use smartphones and the Internet has been amply debunked.
I am surprised at the number of songs that many AC stations refused to play in recent years -- even those that made it into or near the Top 20 of the Billboard AC chart nationally were largely ignored, such as:
Twenty One Pilots - Stressed Out (#17 AC)
Sam Smith - Like I Can (#17 AC)
The Revivalists - Wish I Knew You (#18 AC)
Weezer - Africa (#19 AC)
Foster The People - Sit Next To Me (#21 AC)
Ed Sheeran - Don't (#24 AC)
Mr Probz - Waves (#25 AC)
Sheppard - Geronimo (#25 AC)
Charlie Puth ft. Meghan Trainor - Marvin Gaye (#27 AC)
Little Big Town - Girl Crush (#29 AC)
OK, let's take the top song on the list: In its most successful week, there were 16 current songs that were more popular. 16 currents seems like a lot for an AC. The number is probably closer to "five". AC is not "current driven and probably never will be. To some extent, that's what Hot AC is for.
And Hot AC is more likely to draw whatever crossovers it programs from Urban. Weezer, Sheeran and Puth ft. Trainor aren't what that format is looking for.
Not as much "from urban" as "not from alt leaning". The focus of Hot AC is to be pop without hardcore anything. Rhythmic but not r&b, and so on through the genres.