Understood, and I'm glad to hear that radio is deemed important by artists.Radio wasn't where music was discovered. It was the ONLY place where music was discovered. There was no other place. Now it has competition. But to say people don't discover music on the radio ignores how many artists have depended on radio to put their music in FRONT of people. That's the difference between radio and the internet. The internet is the proverbial haystack in which people are trying to find a needle. Radio puts a focus on certain songs and artists. Radio makes discovery cheap and easy. There's a market for that. Granted it's not the ONLY market. There are other ways to do it. But when it's done well, it works, and artists know it.
But streaming is the future, and the future is now. You are absolutely correct about the internet being the proverbial haystack where people are trying to find a needle. From the perspective of the artist, that needle being lost somewhere in the haystack is the visibility factor, something all internet content creators have to deal with to a certain extent -- how to gain some visibility.
In many cases, they are fighting search and/or suggestion algorithms.
Radio still overcomes the visibility problem, for now.
I read the article and it doesn't really look like there are any answers. One guy apparently says Radio needs more "live and local". LOL. Every time that suggestion is mentioned on radio forums, such as this one, it's usually by older demos who want things the way they were 40 years ago, and it is pooh-poohed by people here (and elsewhere) who know what they're doing. So that is out of the question. I'm not sure about the other suggestions in the article.
For example, one suggestion is "we need to review how we test music to ensure our research target is old enough to represent existing listeners". Isn't that -- and most of the other things mentioned -- already SOP?
One factor that few in the industry seems to bring up is that it's possible that when CHR was still vital in the early 2010's, the pop music was a lot better quality. And now it's not. And the listeners are voting by turning to another format or to a streaming channel. It looks that way on the chart about halfway down the article, the younger demos seem to be tuning CHR out. It's almost as if the pop listeners have already spoken.
Or, maybe what we call pop is aging out. It's happened to other formats -- something mentioned here on RD all the time.