Looking at Des Moines' latest ratings and I've noticed KGGO is not appearing in the last book.
Did they get de listed etc.?
Did they get de listed etc.?
The vast majority of cars are available with HD Radio, at least as an option. Not like you have to buy a Lincoln Navigator for $90,000 to have it.I would also bet the average person rich enough to have a car with an HD Radio won't be listening to OTA radio.
One of the issues here is "how many 12-year-old and older cars have working HD radio?"The sample size of HD-equipped car radios in PPM markets is typically 30-40x the number of in-tab meters. Nationwide, there are currently about six million vehicles equipped with DTS AutoStage. I'm not sure many statisticians would classify that as a "shit sample." Is it the be-all, end-all? No. Are there biases inherent in the methodology? Sure. It is still a nascent technology and it is not accredited research by any stretch of the imagine, but it is serving as another valuable piece of research to those utilizing it.
But, as I just mentioned, half of U.S. cars are 12 years old or older.The vast majority of cars are available with HD Radio, at least as an option. Not like you have to buy a Lincoln Navigator for $90,000 to have it.
I had a rental spec Hyundai Sonata last month with HD Radio. I believe all US-market Hyundai cars have had HD radio for over a decade, and Hyundai is not a rich people brand. Many of those cars will have made it down to used car buyers by now. (I don't know if Hyundai has the particular AutoStage feature Huff mentions).
The only cars I have ever driven that were equipped with HD Radios were rentals....And, unless you use "Rent-a-Wreck" most rental cars are very recent.
Exactly what I mean by "shit sample"....People at the lower socioeconomic levels are likely to have older cars and also ones that did not have HD as standard going back before about 2013. That means that a disproportionate number of Blacks and Hispanics will not have HD radios and will, thus, not be measured.
Unless we can build an index sample that allows for weighting for older cars and the demographics of those that have them, we are going to have a large but highly biased sample.
The new system referenced above is apparently what they are going to try to use to see who's listening and to what. They will use it to try to use as ratings data. Or make program changes from according to what I have heard.
It will be interesting to see how Cumulus is able to make this work. I worry they may actually have to pivot in unexpected ways as/if they realize what people are really listening to and I don't know that as a company they are really ready for it. (At least in Des Moines)
There's certain broadcasting styles and formats that they do -and- don't specialize in. The listener and the advertiser seem to be very disconnected in this City. Maybe some things will stay the same (97-3 KHKI) but I think they may be shocked at what people are listening to and for how long people are tuning into their own properties. And if they cant find the numbers to sell KGGO, for example, but aren't willing to pivot to something else....do they just sell the station to someone else?
It kinda reinforces my theory that there is an effort to divest from terrestrial radio and move into digital/streaming, by design and on purpose.
The original system, back in the later 90's, could only detect FM listening. Today, of course, not as big an issue. In the test markets of LA and Phoenix, they did not sell the service to any station, but a number of retailers bought to know what stations the people driving by their locations were listening to.In the 90's, an experimental system called "Actual Radio Measurement" was tried in a few markets. Seemed like it would set up monitoring in certain high traffic locations and would be able to tell what, if anything, those who drove by were listening to. I don't know if or how well it worked, but the fact that it only referenced in-car listening was a problem at the time, which was only about 1/3 of total listening. I understand radio depends more on automobile listening than it did in the past, but any monitoring based on HD listening will be heavily confined to vehicles.
In some cases, they will go to Eastlan. That already exists, and is less expensive and recognized by some but not all agencies. The issue here is that we buy ratings to sell to agencies, and any system must be acceptable to them in a very high percentage.From what I have heard, Cumulus has been experimenting with several different methodologies to measure listening. Don't be surprised if that's not the only way it measures listening in most of its markets.
Yet many of the digital options are ad-free or have ad-free option, so they don't benefit advertisers at all. The biggest ad "sponge" would be podcasts, in fact.You ride in the direction the horse is going. Digital has reached critical mass, and that's not likely to change. The listeners want it. The advertisers want it, too.
It is on the air, with a low power temporary operation... nobody noticed as they had added FM.When the most powerful AM in Indianapolis signed off the air a few years ago, most nobody even noticed.