The jenY name and concept was a good one, but the execution was too clever by far. People will think about your brand for about half a second. If they can't figure it out in that time, you've lost them. jenY was not only an odd name, it was an unfamiliar format - has anyone ever managed to get cut-through with Modern AC in any market? A weird name and weird music was never going to make a splash.Anyone I asked about JenY thought it was a station aimed at women. No one caught the "Generation Y" allusion, way over their heads. But it was creative.
I wouldn't look to see much of a move away from a jockless presentation. As commented by another poster, owners feel there is no return of the investment for live local announcers or even voice trackers anymore. The audience 107.3 is aimed at listens to almost all their music jockless from the websites and they have had no exposure to anything resembling real DJs or radio personalities other than chatty morning shows or talk radio which they don't associate with their music. No one is going to spend scarce dollars to attempt to expose them to it, there's insufficient reward in today's market.
The new branding is boring - just as boring as all those Alt and New Country and Wolf/Fox/Eagle stations, but people know three things immediately on seeing the name: what it plays, where it's from, where on the dial to find it. Commercially, it's a much better brand.