OhioMediaWatch said:
I can't speak for Mark, but...
It's a struggle all fairly-close-in signals have. Do you superserve the smaller area, or do you go for a piece of the big market bucks?
The question is: Do those folks in Outer New Suburbia identify with those cities where they moved, because it was "freeway close" to the big city, or are they "Big City Metro" people at heart?
Mr. Bohach has a very obvious interest in this topic, due to what his operation does. I do submit that despite the problems listed above, a well-run local operation can extract this listenership out of the "big city" migrants to some degree.
This is a pretty good answer to the question- "why"
The term "superserve" pretty much sums it up. Do this and you will be successful.
But what does superserve mean exactly? It means realizing that we are NOT a big city station. The very things people complain about on this board are the things we aim to avoid- canned formats, lack of personality, lack of community involvement, etc.
In the next two weeks alone, we will provide coverage of The Millersport Sweetcorn Festival, The Hocking County Fair, The Backwoods Festival and at least three high school football games. Add to this the regular schedule of local talk shows covering everything from the blood shortage to our county's need for a new jail.
Will our broadcasts of these events and issues increase our cume, TSL or average quarter hour? I don't know. I don't care. I don't play those games. But I know that every one of these broadcasts is sponsored by cash paying advertisers.
Feel free to ask any of the over eighty advertising clients (the vast majority of them right here in Fairfield County) we have served in the past year why they advertise on our local radio station. Believe me, I am constantly asking this question.
Here are some typical responses: (that have become our selling points)
I can run a lot of commercials on your station for what a few cost on _____.
You guys cover Fairfield County. Nobody from Columbus is going to come to my business.
I want to spend my ad dollars locally. (dollars spent with our station stay in the county)
And my personal favorite- I just like what you do and we need to support that.
When we map out a commercial schedule for a prospective client, we try to give them enough spots to spread out across the entire broadcast week. We take into account that in order to give the advertiser a good reach, the frequency must be sufficient.
And we have built a very high loyalty factor among our advertising clients by doing the little things right. And do you honestly think any advertiser would spend money if they didn't see some tangible result?
To make a blanket statement that smaller community based stations inside metro areas cannot be successful is an insult to great operators like The Pricer and Franks Families in Newark and others I know around the state of Ohio.