JustPastBuffalo said:
^ Yeah, what Nick and Chas said, perfectly. And major props to Chas, whose station had a stellar book.
That means a lot, JPB. Thanks for the kind words. For a market who's had basically two #1 stations since 1950, this is major.
Nick Gerard said:
I'd rather be called a "Production Director" than "Director of Creative Services." The latter is way too pretentious.
Creative Services...to me, was always the person responsible for station imaging.
When I was full-time a decade ago, I wore both Production Director and Creative Services Director hats...and the demands of both clashed with alarming frequency. I wouldn't wish that on anybody.
After leaving 9 years ago to co-found an ad agency (one that does its own in-house production), my Production Director position was morphed with the other Production Director in our building...and my Creative Services replacement assumed imaging for both the Country and HAC stations in the cluster.
I sold my interests in the agency 5 1/2 years ago...the biggest blessing is today they're my biggest home studio client! And having returned to my old station, this time to simply do weekends and fill-ins (including vacation fill for the current Production Director), that model simply works 500% better than combining Production and Imaging.
All that said, Nick, it sounds like you are a true asset to your station/cluster...and KUDOS to anyone who can effectively coach a client session. I've done it too and have been proud of the results.
The one thing that hasn't changed between the two stints is that getting copy on the air, still, all too often becomes audio triage. Rip it, read it, slap bed under it...lather, rinse, repeat...
TheBigA said:
SirRoxalot said:
The "14-unit" model is most likely to change. Advertisers simply want their spots to be heard. My guess - and it's purely a guess - is that we may go back to sponsoring blocks of content, with a few longer ads and a lot of mentions in an exclusive time period.
Great idea. Show me a business plan where you can do this. How much would it cost an advertiser for a block vs. multiple short spots scattered throughout the day? The truth is that this has always been an option for advertisers, but very few are interested because the cost is too high, and they feel they benefit from ad repetition.
SirRoxalot said:
Another alternative is to do what the on-line free services do - insert short ads between songs.
Same as above. Show me how a station can make the same amount of money by running short spots between songs.
Someone has to have the courage to try...including proper training for AE's...management willing to try some different thinking, jocks who can creatively execute.
Try it at night first.
Tweak as necessary and learn to discern between a tweak and a knee-jerk.
And above all, understand that this is probably like the final scene in the movie
Working Girl, where upon discussing ground rules with her new assistant, Melanie Griffith's character Tess says,
"And the rest we'll just make up as we go along".
Isn't that where Todd Storz and Gordon McLendon were circa 1952?