Radio-Insight provided PPM’s. Just making it easier for those who prefer this site.
San Francisco – RadioInsight
San Jose – RadioInsight
Those are still the meaningless 6+ numbers (the only ones Nielsen allows to be made public). It even says so in the header: "Average Quarter Hour Share for Persons 6+, Mon-Sun 6AM-Mid".
What I posted was the demographic rankings, which are different from the "PPMs" (and all that term refers to is that the market is big enough for Nielsen to use the Portable People Meter). Those who "prefer" to use those numbers for discussion will invariably come to erroneous conclusions, as both David and I have said many times. "PPM" is not a term that magically converts 6+ numbers into something meaningful.
Some people still want to see the PPM numbers and Radio-Insight does a better job then the site Henry posted.
Remember, the 6+ or 12+ bulk numbers are as useful as the funny and entertaining lists that David Letterman used to feature on his late-night TV show: amusing but valueless!You said this last time, and I agree with you that the demographics are better and everyone that frequents this forum knows that. Some people still want to see the PPM numbers and Radio-Insight does a better job then the site Henry posted. No harm in that.
Remember, the 6+ or 12+ bulk numbers are as useful as the funny and entertaining lists that David Letterman used to feature on his late-night TV show: amusing but valueless!
How do I know they are without value?
Nielsen, which spends hundreds of millions each year researching radio gives them away.
Why do they give them away, then?
People love lists. By getting free publicity, Nielsen enhances its name recognition and that makes recruiting participants in its surveys easier. So they reap a huge benefit by granting free access to a portion of their research that nobody would ever, ever pay for.
Example of being "valueless"?
MeTV FM in Chicago shows in the top 10 in 6+ PPM numbers. Yet they are barely in the Top 30 stations in 25-54 or 18-49. And their ad sales reflect that.
Example of being "valueless"?
MeTV FM in Chicago shows in the top 10 in 6+ PPM numbers. Yet they are barely in the Top 30 stations in 25-54 or 18-49. And their ad sales reflect that.
Perhaps they no longer subscribe to the embedded market. I see the San Jose embedded market going away in the nearish future, just like Orange County disappeared as a breakout of the LA book.Hmmmmm….KISq 98.1 The Breeze is missing in the San Jose ratings.
1963?If I may, I would like to add a rhetorical question to that example:
When was the last time you heard of any agency making a buy based solely on the 6+/12+ numbers?
1963?
And still, Nielsen and Arbitron before it gave those numbers away because, other than marquee value, they are still worthless and have no value of any kind.I've written this before, but you guys keep missing the point. The 6+ numbers give you one thing that the demo breakouts don't: they give you (to the extent of the survey's underlying accuracy) an apples-to-apples comparison of how the total listenership of subscribing stations compares to each other, across all demographics that have graduated kindergarten. A seven-year-old counts the same as a geriatric person in a wheelchair as a a sports-obsessed young male as a 29 y/o female equipping her first home. Raw listenership. That comparison has nothing to do with ad sales, revenue, profit, ancillary/non-traditional revenue, etc. It is simply a synthesis of each station's raw popularity in the market, the total number of ears each station gets, or total market impact. And no matter how tightly you insist on tying the blinders on your heads, that ain't chopped liver.
Raw listenership. That comparison has nothing to do with ad sales, revenue, profit, ancillary/non-traditional revenue, etc. It is simply a synthesis of each station's raw popularity in the market, the total number of ears each station gets, or total market impact. And no matter how tightly you insist on tying the blinders on your heads, that ain't chopped liver.