Do radio stations do live radio giveaways anymore
You probably should have asked whether they still do them "live live" or "live on tape."Do radio stations do live radio giveaways anymore
In this whole data tribe, you are forgetting that radio no longer has the revenue base to support the kind of things that you seem to miss. In a post today, Lance detailed the BIA revenue rank of stations in San Francisco. What you can see is that today’s revenue per station is well under half what it was 20 years ago and that is before adjusting for inflation. In other words, radio revenue is down about 75%.I learned many years ago from some of the best in the business, only a small percentage of listeners actually participate in contests. The whole point is (or was) not just to hand out a prize to an anonymous listener that the rest of the audience doesn't care about, it's to generate entertainment value on the air and hopefully capture great audio to be used in station promos. To that end, we always turned the contests into very entertaining features and put the contestants on the air, either live or recorded, edited as necessary, and quickly played back. It's yet another formerly great part of radio that has fallen by the wayside thanks to empty studios and out-of-market voicetracks prerecorded hours or days in advance.
What's the point of today's text or email-to-win radio contests? There's no entertainment value to be had from them. You're not capturing good audio to be used on the radio which is an audio-only medium. A lot of stations don't even follow up to announce the winner's name. You might increase TSL by a very few contest pigs who are unlikely to be Nielsen panelists, but for everyone else they're just clutter with no payoff.
The past two years on the way to the mountains I've had to wait an hour to hear country music because the station I wanted to listen to was doing a Swap Shop with other co-owned stations around the area. Ridiculous. That sort of thing should be finished by 10:00, but no, they wait until 11."Do radio stations do Tradio anymore?"
The social media prize pigs are a problem. A radio station close to me gets little to no attention on most of its Facebook posts, which are local news, event information, bits about programming. As soon as there's a "comment to win a wetsuit" contest post, suddenly 1,200 people come out of the woodwork. None of them listen to or have heard of the radio station. Most don't even live in the area. But there are whole community groups on social media devoted to dredging up competition posts and sharing them.I learned many years ago from some of the best in the business, only a small percentage of listeners actually participate in contests. The whole point is (or was) not just to hand out a prize to an anonymous listener that the rest of the audience doesn't care about, it's to generate entertainment value on the air and hopefully capture great audio to be used in station promos. To that end, we always turned the contests into very entertaining features and put the contestants on the air, either live or recorded, edited as necessary, and quickly played back. It's yet another formerly great part of radio that has fallen by the wayside thanks to empty studios and out-of-market voicetracks prerecorded hours or days in advance.
What's the point of today's text or email-to-win radio contests? There's no entertainment value to be had from them. You're not capturing good audio to be used on the radio which is an audio-only medium. A lot of stations don't even follow up to announce the winner's name. You might increase TSL by a very few contest pigs who are unlikely to be Nielsen panelists, but for everyone else they're just clutter with no payoff.
Something like this happened to me in 1986 or so.As @Theater of My Mind said, hearing contestants on-air was meant to create excitement and entertainment. But having truly live callers also meant the risk of listeners calling into, say, KIIS-FM, and when asked "Who's your favorite music station?!", hearing them shout "KPWR!" To that add listeners who drop constant F-bombs, who sound like they're on quaaludes, who think the station's transmitter is sending secret signals to the KGB, and who lock up like Windows 95 the second they know everyone can hear them. Prerecording callers "live to tape" lets jocks circumvent all that. If the "first" caller #20 doesn't work out, they can dump the call, answer another 19 lines, and congratulate the "next" caller #20. (Notice how the talent in the video above didn't answer the remaining lines to dismiss everybody still on hold until he was certain the "first" caller #20 had worked out perfectly.)
Do you not have a tape player in the '86 Corolla?The past two years on the way to the mountains I've had to wait an hour to hear country music because the station I wanted to listen to was doing a Swap Shop with other co-owned stations around the area. Ridiculous. That sort of thing should be finished by 10:00, but no, they wait until 11.
But there is a good pop station in the area, with doo-wop and rock and roll.
I don't have any CDs, no. I'd rather listen to the music on the radio.Do you not have a tape player in the '86 Corolla?
I know quite a few stations that have started to limit contests either to a mechanic where you have to be listening to the station (text in after we play X song) or restricted entry to people living in the station patch.
The past two years on the way to the mountains I've had to wait an hour to hear country music because the station I wanted to listen to was doing a Swap Shop with other co-owned stations around the area. Ridiculous. That sort of thing should be finished by 10:00, but no, they wait until 11.
The past two years on the way to the mountains I've had to wait an hour to hear country music because the station I wanted to listen to was doing a Swap Shop with other co-owned stations around the area. Ridiculous. That sort of thing should be finished by 10:00, but no, they wait until 11.
But there is a good pop station in the area, with doo-wop and rock and roll.
Instagram and Facebook can promote listener engagement. They are viable tools to use. In today's market, every little bit helps.That's what we do on KRKE. See post #5. Gotta have the requirement for actually listening and paying attention.
KRKE doesn't have a Facebook page or Instagram account, but I have been discussing it with the owner because I think I could use those to promote programming (e.g. "this week on American Top 40: The 80's, Casey Kasem counts down the hits from June 12, 1986", or "some of Freddy Snakeskin's 'deep tracks' on Flashback Weekend this Friday will be from The Smiths, Echo & the Bunnymen and Devo".) If anyone wants to comment as well, that's bonus content to me.
I don't know what time it starts, but it should be over with by 10. If it started at 9, that would be an hour. It is possible it starts at 10 and goes to 11. An hour earlier would be more reasonable.No way. I guarentee you swap shop is making them money or they wouldnt do 2 hours of it. so you want them to cut back on and lose revenue?
Swap shop is still hugely popular on some stations