The big radio defenders on this board are seemingly reluctant to admit their medium has inherent issues that are making it increasingly uncompetitive. There are still some darn good stations out there, though. FM 98 - errr, "97-9" WJLB - sounds great at the moment. WKQI is rock solid. Q106 and WITL in Lansing are both outstanding.
Yet when a station puts on a syndicated show such as Delilah or Tesh (or whatever fits the format) they wipe the other stations in their particular arena off the map.
Not true. It was tried in Detroit. Both hosts were canceled eventually.
That may have been a "gee, golly, I was on the radio" moment then but today people in the younger format areas don't use the phone and if they want to show off, they go to Pnnterest or Facebook or whichever social media site is having its moment in the sun.
The success of Mojo on WKQI, Dave & Chuck on WRIF, Blaine on WDVD, and the entirety of local programming on 97.1 The Ticket disproves your assertion. Those shows make heavy use of callers.
96.3's best ratings of the past 25+ years came when the station had highly engaging personalities (Blaine Fowler, Jake Edwards, Jesse Addy, Scott Vertical), offered impressive local contests ($10,000 cash giveaways, $9600 shopping sprees, etc.), produced excellent on-air creative pieces, and offered multiple opportunities throughout the day for listeners to call into the station. This wasn't ancient history; this was 10 or 12 years ago.
Look, the right national programming *can* work and work darn well. There are just scant few examples of that outside of spoken word or urban radio, though.
WOMC is the highest billing FM in the market. Other than obeying any research them might do to keep the existing audience happy, it is doubtful they will make major changes.
Their biggest problem is that the core is aging, and they will have to speed up the renewal of the library to keep the 25-54 audience happy. That, of course, means not paying any attention to the over-55's even thought they are about third in the market in that group.
I've been reading the same thing about WOMC for more than a decade. Magically, their billing always remains at or near the front of the pack. I do not know for sure if they are #1 in billing at the moment, but they are almost assuredly in the top 3. WRIF and WKQI have to got to be nipping right on their heels at worst.
Entercom is about to take the same hatchet to its classic hits stations that it has already taken to its country stations.