The answer is you don't know.
I know what cluster leverage is. WXBK is not a single station all alone by itself. It's part of a cluster.
The answer is you don't know.
I know what cluster leverage is.
Today, agencies buy a package of multiple stations in a cluster at a rate that includes them all. It is not about the individual station but what the combination offers to advertisers.And what agencies are buying the last-place FM, third of three in its format, #21-ranked radio station in the market now?
Very rarely do agencies buy based on cume. While cume may be considered for R&F analysis, the key is rating (which is, of course, the same as share and AQH persons). So most ad buys have a goal expressed in GRIPs (Gross Ratings Points), they don't even look at cume as a measure.The cume for 97.1 now was pretty high too, and then audacy flipped it to knx
WINS is not #5 in sales demos. It has improved a bit, but is still much lower in the sales demos than it is in 6+ or 12+.I've said it before but I'll say it again. Give WCBS 880 an FM simulcast on 94.7. You don't let a station with WCBS's wonderful billing sink. And sinking it is, stuck on the AM band while WINS is #5 in the latest NYC ratings with its FM simulcast.
Today, agencies buy a package of multiple stations in a cluster at a rate that includes them all. It is not about the individual station but what the combination offers to advertisers.
If the owner creates a package that is competitive on Cost Per Point, they get on the buy.
I don't know about that. I would think that a music format is cheaper to run than an all-news format. If I were Audacy, I would keep The Block's format for now. If it fails and there's no other feasible music formats to flip to, then switch to the WCBS all-news simulcast.I've said it before but I'll say it again. Give WCBS 880 an FM simulcast on 94.7. You don't let a station with WCBS's wonderful billing sink. And sinking it is, stuck on the AM band while WINS is #5 in the latest NYC ratings with its FM simulcast.
They could just as easily throw in an Alt or WCBS or Adult Hits or any of the other things people mentioned,
It's not a bonus. Despite its lower ratings, its AQH persons number would make it Top 5 in a slightly smaller market. So they get a decent rate and contribute to the total rating of the cluster.In other words they are throwing in WXBK as a bonus.
But in most ad campaign's target demos, not every station ads "bulk" to a targeted buy.Still doesn't mean it's worth anything. They could just as easily throw in an Alt or WCBS or Adult Hits or any of the other things people mentioned, any of which would likely rank higher than #21 in the market with a 1.3 share on its own merit.
And The Block's signal is not a good pairing for 880 AM. If a station adds an FM, they should really try to have a comparable signal in the MSA.I don't know about that. I would think that a music format is cheaper to run than an all-news format. If I were Audacy, I would keep The Block's format for now. If it fails and there's no other feasible music formats to flip to, then switch to the WCBS all-news simulcast.
K-EARTH & JACK in LA aboth owned by Audacy.. Variety hits could be a backdoor way of getting a Classic Alternative station... Look at how JACK in LA is programmed, it was a very classic Alt sounding station for a while there.Variety hits is out of the question for 94.7 with 101.1 in the same cluster.
Speaking of revenue last yr around this time we got the BIA top 10 2022 rev stations but i have seen the 2023 list yet.
I've said it before but I'll say it again. Give WCBS 880 an FM simulcast on 94.7. You don't let a station with WCBS's wonderful billing sink. And sinking it is, stuck on the AM band while WINS is #5 in the latest NYC ratings with its FM simulcast.
WINS is not #5 in sales demos. It has improved a bit, but is still much lower in the sales demos than it is in 6+ or 12+.
radioinsight.com
Because WINS-FM HD2 is Alt 92.3 HD2, running alternative, while WINS-FM is news.Why is WINS-FM HD2 listed as "alternative" instead of "news?"
0.1 rating for ALT 92.3 on HD Radio. I wonder when HD radio will become more widely available and cheaper