And in the larger groups... taking Pittman as an example... do you think he actually makes the decision on changing a station in Columbus, GA from AC to Urban AC? (Which they really ought to do with WGSY, by the way)David, where did I mention "Directors" or "Board of Directors" earlier? I was talking about C-suite officers (CEO and COO in particular) being involved in strategically important product decisions, not outsiders who sit on the Board.
Of course they don't. These people are focused on revenue, expense, BCF, and shareholder relations. Other people who the company hires to program and be GM of markets are the ones responsible for minutia like formats and whether this song or that song is played on a station.And in the larger groups... taking Pittman as an example... do you think he actually makes the decision on changing a station in Columbus, GA from AC to Urban AC? (Which they really ought to do with WGSY, by the way)
Instead, we got Cumulus and Citadel and all the other expansion disasters.
The southeastern cities that grew and had extreme sprawl were especially hit with AM stations as they had fewer allocations and just grew outside of the coverage area. Atlanta is an example of a market where there’s one, maybe two viable AM signals for the whole market.And, as the population moved out of the central City of Cleveland zone, many of the AMs became unable to cover the whole market's population, making those formerly valuable and top rated facilities that were WERE, WHK and WIXY unable to compete.
So now, in that market that had 7 truly viable AMs in 1960 we have one or two viable AMs and 16 to 17 pretty complete coverage FMs. So the market has more than double the useful/usable signals while population has decreased or been stagnant.
A huge percentage of markets in slow-or-no-growth states have seen the same thing, whether it be Milwaukee or Grand Rapids or Buffalo or Hartford or Youngstown or Charleston, WV or Roanoke or St Louis.
The Rust Belt was the most severely affected by the combination of population loss, suburban flight and added stations. But even growth markets like Atlanta, Nashville, Dallas, Houston, Phoenix, Denver and Salt Lake City and others like them found few if any AMs to remain viable while existing FMs and Docket 80-90 move-ins resulted in double or triple the viable stations in each market.
It seems like when they got CBS, they tried to run the company more like CBS than the old Entercom, and it’s been discussed here that CBS wasn’t exactly the most efficient operator.
I believe the investment community lost interest in (mainly) pure radio companies years ago. So goes the same with TV-centrist companies.They've obviously lost the confidence of the investment community.
I guarantee you Bob Pittman would be up in arms if one of his employees were to decide to kill off Z100, Lite 106.7 or KIIS without informing him or his COO of the rationale for the decision beforehand.
And that's the way it's usually done. Corporate looks at the overall financial health of the entire company, and determines a percentage of savings to get into a better position for Q4 and into Q1 reporting. Next GM's get the not great news, but works with their programming folks to determine who gets cut.Here's an article that quantifies the job cuts at Audacy.
And that's the way it's usually done. Corporate looks at the overall financial health of the entire company, and determines a percentage of savings to get into a better position for Q4 and into Q1 reporting.
Totally agree. They may have assumed that their streaming business would have performed better than it did by now, making up for the difference. Can't predict the future, but by Q2 and trends, you make your best guess. Add in losses around the pandemic, amortized expense from two rounds of ransomware attacks, and inflation effects to the cost of doing business, and I'm kind of surprised expenses were only up 5%.One interesting detail in the 2nd Q numbers was that operating expenses were up by a factor of 5%. The increase in operating expenses might come from inflation, employee raises, insurance and benefit increases, and factors that put attention on the size of the staff. They need to find a way to control operating expenses while at the same time investing in potential growth areas. They're not going to get much more money from broadcasting.
as we emerged from the pandemic, it became clear that there were areas in our workforce that needed adjustment.”
Earlier starts this year. Usually these cuts start further into Q4, like November.Earlier I posted a story from Inside Radio that said Audacy was cutting its workforce by 5%. Today, that same site reports that BMI, the music licensing company that radio stations pay for music, is cutting its workforce by 10%! BMI recently reported record earnings, so they're not cutting staff because of that. Here's the story:
Of course BMI has a smaller staff, a
nd 10% of its workforce is 30 people. Here's a quote from the article:
I'm sure a lot of businesses will be making similar "adjustments."
And Long Island is a subset of the New York City market, fully contained within it... just like San Jose which is inside the San Francisco market.Exactly right. I suspect he also views having a CHR/Pop format in his company's largest markets as being strategically important for the company on a national level.
I believe Houston is the only top 10 market where iHM does not own an English language CHR/Pop station. Heck, it might be the only such market out of the top 20 markets (perhaps there's one more such market I'm forgetting).
Edit:. Puerto Rico, ranked #19, is the only other example. In fact, it's the only other example out of the Top 25 markets. Nassau-Suffolk is a submarket of NYC, and Z100 gets great ratings there, so I'm not counting them among the exceptions.
Doesn't BMI have agents in the field, who check on licenses of taverns and other similar establishments? Or is that just ASCAP?