Tied for the 6th in 18-34, not sure about elsewhere: Research Director Inc., Exclusive July '22 PPM Analysis For New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, San Francisco And Dallas-Fort WorthGood to see 105.7 showing some signs of life. Their 1.5 share is their best showing in S.F. in ages. Not sure how demos are fairing, of course.
Remember, San Jose is part of the San Francisco market.Nice first book for KBAY as a country station in San Jose, but little impact in San Francisco.
Woah. The Game going from 2.3 to 1.3. I know it’s only 6+. But dang
I dunno, KGO is faltering badly, so I don't see how KPIX would do better. And the more liberal-minded types listen to KQED anyway.Maybe a format change is in order at 95.7? Maybe they should bring back the old KPIX talk radio format.
I’m curious if they bill well as a sports station? In some cases, sports radio doesn’t automatically equate high billing. Heck, the station I worked for is billing less than what it did as a classic country stand alone AMMaybe a format change is in order at 95.7? Maybe they should bring back the old KPIX talk radio format.
Likely an inadvertent skip in the listing you looked at.KDFC is missing from the San Jose survey.
KDON is really a Monterey-Salinas-Santa Cruz station.KDON is missing from the San Jose survey. Is it because they don't subscribe to the San Jose ratings book?
But it has a 60 dbu over central and southern Santa Clara County, all the way to Cupertino. However, it has not shown in the San Jose book at least for the last year.KDON is really a Monterey-Salinas-Santa Cruz station.
A little surprised that 10 months of the "Dave FM" format hasn't helped KITS's numbers. And in the CHR battle, former leader KYLD has now lost to KMVQ for two books.Here are the July 2022 San Francisco Radio PPM Ratings:
https://ratings.****************/content/arb009
And the July 2022 San Jose Radio PPM Ratings:
https://ratings.****************/content/arb215
Any thoughts or observations?
If you hear hoof beats, think "horses" and not "zebras".I still don't quite understand how KUSC/Los Angeles consistently shows up in the San Francisco ratings. Obviously they have no OTA signal there. I know USC also owns KDFC and its various full-power satellites around the Bay Area. Could PPM encoders be crediting KDFC listening to KUSC by mistake?
Thanks David, but I'm still a bit confused. I'll make up a scenario. Let's say I'm a PPM user who listens to KUSC in L.A. Then I fly to San Francisco. Is my KUSC listening data then "transmitted" to the S.F. collection point -- causing KUSC to register in the Bay Area ratings? Forgive my ignorance on how this all works; I am not a radio professional.If you hear hoof beats, think "horses" and not "zebras".
Encoders do not "credit" anything. The PPM devices carried by listeners do when they pick up a coded identifier.
Many way-outta-market stations show up in different books because people travel, or they work in a different radio market than their residence market.
All PPM data is sent to one location in the Nielsen organization for all 48 PPM markets.Thanks David, but I'm still a bit confused. I'll make up a scenario. Let's say I'm a PPM user who listens to KUSC in L.A. Then I fly to San Francisco. Is my KUSC listening data then "transmitted" to the S.F. collection point -- causing KUSC to register in the Bay Area ratings? Forgive my ignorance on how this all works; I am not a radio professional.
I still don't quite understand how KUSC/Los Angeles consistently shows up in the San Francisco ratings. Obviously they have no OTA signal there. I know USC also owns KDFC and its various full-power satellites around the Bay Area. Could PPM encoders be crediting KDFC listening to KUSC by mistake?