Check out Chicago's 98.7 WFMT...Classical, commercial and reasonably successful for their desired audience.
They're a commercial station owned by a non-profit. Very unusual.
Check out Chicago's 98.7 WFMT...Classical, commercial and reasonably successful for their desired audience.
As I said on another thread probably a year or so ago, WFMT is unique in that ALL spots are read live by the on air personality. According to WFMT management 100s of thousands of dollars in potential advertising, is "regrettably" turned down annually because many potential accounts naturally want the station to use their canned ads. WFMT has been operating like this for several decades, and the audience loves the station just the way it is and they are fiercely loyal, and yes they have a membership program to help cover costs not paid for by advertising.They're a commercial station owned by a non-profit. Very unusual.
Though definitely not un-heard of. I worked at one.They're a commercial station owned by a non-profit. Very unusual.
Very, very well said... I've been a classical fan since my childhood in the 60s but I also liked the pop music of the same era just as much my friends and acquaintances who new nothing about classical music. My musical taste has always been very eclectic, sometimes so much so that I can't decide what to listen to!WFMT makes it partly on commercials and partly on donations. WFMT would likely not make it without that extra revenue beyond commercials. WRR in Dallas just went from commercial to public supported for this very reason. Classical is the real true outlier of all radio formats. It carries stereotypes and perceptions as well as international appeal. New works are still being composed and conductors are putting fresh arrangement to centuries old compositions. In fact new recordings of composers from prior centuries are being recorded for the first time and some new compositions from certain composers have been found. With all that said, Classical is skewing 65+. It seems most have above average incomes and tend to have college degrees. Then again my income is way to average and my education doesn't have me with initials after my name but I like classical. WFMT is a treasure!
And then we have Bonneville, owned by the LDS.Though definitely not un-heard of. I worked at one.
And visual media such as the web, TV and print, are where budgets going after 55+ are placed.I know print is a different game but AARP magazine sells a lot of advertising and their advertising market is 50 plus.
I've tried. Zero agency business and only mom and pop businesses spending $200 a month and never renewing because while we had thousands listening in the 5.5 million metro, we had maybe 10 listening within the trade area of that advertising business. Remember, it takes weeks of calling on a business to build trust for them to buy. I spent more on gas and auto upkeep than I got in commission. The smaller the town gets, the better the chances you can produce some results. The money in sales is made not by the first month but if the client stays on month after month. In time you have a nice list on every month ad can make decent money. If you are starting at square one each month all you do is dig a deeper hole for yourself.
Any business in a city is more likely to have an agency directing their buys than not. I'm talking a former salesperson at some station is a one person agency and they use all the research that says it costs less to convert a younger age person as a long term customer than one over 55. In that, radio's hands are tied.
What has to happen for that to change is for ad agencies to change, not radio.
I sell in a county of 40,000 now and our January was almost what December was. Everywhere else I've worked, January was about a third of your December billing. I could sell a 55+ format here if it had local info as a part of its format.