And if what we are talking about is the change to Regional Mexican, observers need to understand that most Spanish language buys are not made "against" the general market rankings. They are made, often by separate Hispanic account agencies, to reach Spanish speaking Hispanics in each market.Talk about skewing something that's not at all surprising.
One is a network of signals that covers the majority of the population in the market with a brand that has been established.
The other flipped halfway through the survey period completely wiping out its former audience and not yet establishing its new one.
LOL @ X-98.5 being tied with Positive, Encouraging 94.5. I know EMF doesn’t care about ratings, but still hilarious a 250 watt hairdryer is tied with a 100kw blowtorch 🤣I just think it is hilarious when a few 250 watt stations beat a 25,000 watt station. Maybe it's not about "skewing something that was expected." Maybe its a tribute to how launching a station without promotion of any sort will cause failure.
Same for WEPR. I guess they didn’t subscribe....and what happened to His Radio? Was WLFJ delisted for some reason? Also WSHP? Showing NA for the last two months
That religious station is hardly obscure. It is and has been extremely popular in the market for years.I remember being shocked when things changed that some obscure (or so I thought) religious station was #1 in Orlando for a time.
Correct. But people who observed the market from outside, like me, saw some "obscure" station they had never seen before pop up to #1. It means absolutely nothing because they don't sell ads, but still, it took me aback quite a bit.That religious station is hardly obscure. It is and has been extremely popular in the market for years.
At present, non-subscribers don't show in free public releases at all. And in subscriber releases to stations and agencies, only if they have a rating of 0.1 or over... which is the equivalent of well over a 1.0 share.
Some non-coms are subscribed.Correct. But people who observed the market from outside, like me, saw some "obscure" station they had never seen before pop up to #1. It means absolutely nothing because they don't sell ads, but still, it took me aback quite a bit.
I guess that rule changed, making non coms not show in public releases. After all, in Greenville, WEPR and the His radio stations were showing in public as recent as 2 months ago.
While EMF management has changed, I was told a few years ago that they buy ratings in a few markets they feel represent their total cross section of markets. That might mean that they have a larger and smaller market in each geographic region and, maybe, books where they have a direct competitor.RTN (His Radio) may be subscribing off and on to test the waters and see how they’re holding up against K-Love and Air1 which entered the market late last year. EMF doesn’t generally subscribe, but I guess they’re subscribing for a while in GSP to get a pulse on where their listenership is for now.
SCPR tends to subscribe on a semi regular basis. If one station subscribes, they all do.
Is this a new strategy for them? They’ve wrecked the once decently performing WURV in Richmond, WHZT has gone downhill (not just with ratings, it sounds bad), and sister station WKHT in Knoxville is down also. It seems like they would hit a point of losing advertisers due to low ratings at some point, making the strategy backfire.Summit has a Rhythmic station and a similar Urban station for reasons that are all related. Mediabase and record labels and "indie's". They report to different charts, they can get money from the indie's (independent record promotor) for both.
If you look at CHR, Country, Hot AC, Rhythmic - you often see the Summit stations leading the way on spins. There's usually a few head scratchers. It's why their Hot AC's have truly abysmal ratings. They're profiting from the indie's and labels.
They can't do that with a Classic Hits format.
Just a theory.