It's funny that people are saying if The Wolf can just get to a 2 share, that will be a huge success.
Nobody said "huge success."
It's funny that people are saying if The Wolf can just get to a 2 share, that will be a huge success.
Pulling a 2 share would be a success if all of those two shares came from WYRK, but in all likelihood that won't happen because the Country format (in this market) picks up listeners from Classic Rock, Classic Hits and some AC as well. To be judged a success, the Wolf will need at least a 3 share Persons 12+ and score some AQH Persons in demos that can be packaged with Kiss or Star.It's funny that people are saying if The Wolf can just get to a 2 share, that will be a huge success. The bar has been lowered considerably. Entercom has also never bothered to change the call letters from WLKK. Those were from The Lake. They have saved a few bucks with 3 format changes since then...
Or they could implement RANDOM 107.7.Pulling a 2 share would be a success if all of those two shares came from WYRK, but in all likelihood that won't happen because the Country format (in this market) picks up listeners from Classic Rock, Classic Hits and some AC as well. To be judged a success, the Wolf will need at least a 3 share Persons 12+ and score some AQH Persons in demos that can be packaged with Kiss or Star.
About those WLKK call letters... unless they're part of the station brand, like WYRK, WGR, WBEN or WBFO, they're not important. The Lake only used the calls in the TOH legal ID. In all other breaks the brand was The Lake.
And who knows, the next format down the road could be K107-7 ... or Like107-7 ... only half kidding about that.
It depends. Dallas, Nashville, Indianapolis, and several others were relatively unaffected.
I forgot a line break so it was unclear. The former part was about the Lake, the latter part was Alt Buffalo. My apologies.Are you talking about The Lake or ALT? They are not the same thing.
I have no doubt Audacy is keenly aware of the fact that going toe to toe with WYRK and the various country stations between Rochester and Buffalo isn't going to be easy, and so a 2 share is enough success for them; the success doesn't have to be huge, either. Whether that's lowering the bar or not, it's better billing than Alt and that's all they care about.It's funny that people are saying if The Wolf can just get to a 2 share, that will be a huge success. The bar has been lowered considerably.
Many radio stations still wear the callsigns of old formats. The few that come to mind are WVKL in Norfolk (from its Oldies format), KBIG Los Angeles, WOCL Orlando (from its days as Cool 105.9), and just down the 90, WDVI in Rochester (from the variety The Drive format). Audacy not bothering to change WLKK's callsign means about nothing.Entercom has also never bothered to change the call letters from WLKK. Those were from The Lake. They have saved a few bucks with 3 format changes since then...
WPOP Hartford CT hasn't had a music format for more than 40 years!I forgot a line break so it was unclear. The former part was about the Lake, the latter part was Alt Buffalo. My apologies.
The music mix obviously played a part in the Alt format's demise, but anything that made it special prior to that, such as the local airstaff and the station events had all unceremoniously gone away. It was a shell of what it was.
I have no doubt Audacy is keenly aware of the fact that going toe to toe with WYRK and the various country stations between Rochester and Buffalo isn't going to be easy, and so a 2 share is enough success for them; the success doesn't have to be huge, either. Whether that's lowering the bar or not, it's better billing than Alt and that's all they care about.
Many radio stations still wear the callsigns of old formats. The few that come to mind are WVKL in Norfolk (from its Oldies format), KBIG Los Angeles, WOCL Orlando (from its days as Cool 105.9), and just down the 90, WDVI in Rochester (from the variety The Drive format). Audacy not bothering to change WLKK's callsign means about nothing.
I am not exaggerating the potential. I was on air and sold this signal for 5 years when it was a new country format. Here are the facts.You exaggerate the potential.
The 65 dbu signal is where in diary markets 95% the at-home and at-work occurs. The station only covers the SE third of the Buffalo market MSA with that signal, and very little of the Rochester market.
It gets a little farther in cars, but in the diary markets in-car is still less than half of the AQH listening.
And where there is a better signal in a format, most listeners will not listen to the one that is hard to get or or pops in and out when driving between buildings or under bridges and the like.
This is where doing a more gold based format makes sense; listening to an inferior signal will only occur if there is no alternative. For contemporary country, there is an alternative in both Rochester and Buffalo.
* As of today, no one I know out of radio even knows the station went country. Zero promotion
A copycat format, on a non-city-grade signal, run by a company who’s now gutting its CHR stations to cut costs.Here's the thing: There are some big concerts coming to Buffalo in the next few months. Luke Bryan is one of the biggest stars in the format. Eric Church is Entertainer of the Year. Both will be in Buffalo. Whatever The Wolf is going to do, they need to be doing it by then. They need to be ON LOCATION at both of those concerts, giving out swag. That's when you let people know who you are and what you're doing. And you better be ready, because there's no opportunity to make a second impression.
A copycat format, on a non-city-grade signal, run by a company who’s gutting its CHR stations to cut costs.
Exactly.In summary….This format and signal will bring in more local direct dollars, have low ratings, and May shave a few bucks from YRK, and fragment the Yrk audience a bit, but not much.
It's city grade for over a half-million people. It's just that some of that is not in the Buffalo metro.A copycat format, on a non-city-grade signal, run by a company who’s now gutting its CHR stations to cut costs.
There are car dealers that advertise on suburban stations, for example, to get more rural buyers to come for "better" prices. There are lots of opportunities for direct sellers.
All of the names you mention except for Haggard, Jones, Cash, Nelson and Jennings are played as gold on many contemporary country stations. I assume that if WNUC is attacking WYRK by playing more hot young country, then WYRK is already playing tracks like "Check Yes or No" and "Friends in Low Places" once or twice an hour. That's fine for a country station in 2021. All gold won't work because people in their 40s and 50s were still listening to country radio in the '80s and well into the '90s. Those people are no longer valuable to advertisers, as they're now in the 60s and older. If country music had had significant youth appeal in those years -- especially pre-Garth -- then classic country would be a much more viable format in the 2020s.In summary….This format and signal will bring in more local direct dollars, have low ratings, and May shave a few bucks from YRK, and fragment the Yrk audience a bit, but not much. It should have been a gold based country station. Hank Jr, Toby Kieth, Clint Black, Alan Jackson, George Strait, Tim McGraw, Judd’s, Randy Travis, Garth, Brooks and Dunn, Merle Haggard ( my personal fav), George Jones, Johnny Cash. Waylon, Willie.
I assume that if WNUC is attacking WYRK by playing more hot young country, then WYRK is already playing tracks like "Check Yes or No" and "Friends in Low Places" once or twice an hour.
Radio people have a tendency to pooh-pooh jukeboxes.
WYRK is going to own concert promotion. The cluster has a solid reputation for getting the job done, has great adaptive capability and knows how to work street presence on behalf of clients and listeners. That said, The Wolf better have a seasoned street team ready to roll before the concert season shifts into high gear.
Many people were saying that Alternative was great for NTR and was a better fit with KISS and STAR. They even shared a few song titles.Exactly.
If they can get good local direct sellers, they can make money. And the station can be packaged better in the cluster than the alternative format could.
A station does not have to be in the top 5 or 10 in the ratings to be profitable. Ratings are a sales tool, just as service, good copywriting and production, and results are.
Many people were saying that Alternative was great for NTR and was a better fit with KISS and STAR.