Be a pal, and please link us to this vital research. What you're saying is diametrically opposed to the studies I've seen, like:
http://www.arbitron.com/study/spot_study.asp
A newer study says that stopsets up to 6 minutes are still effective:
http://mcqmedia.us/long-commercial-breaks-bad-for-business/
I can't imagine that anybody has more or better research available than the on-line music providers themselves. If they're running one spot between songs instead of clustering them, it just might be that they have results showing that's more effective than running several songs, then several spots.
Until you can get people to pony up subscription money for OTA radio, you pretty much have to run spots. On-line services offer "free" music - some now capped at a maximum number of hours per month - because they need income just like radio. So, if you can show us that ANY interruption causes a tune-out, the rest of us radio guys would sure like to see that study.
http://www.arbitron.com/study/spot_study.asp
A newer study says that stopsets up to 6 minutes are still effective:
http://mcqmedia.us/long-commercial-breaks-bad-for-business/
I can't imagine that anybody has more or better research available than the on-line music providers themselves. If they're running one spot between songs instead of clustering them, it just might be that they have results showing that's more effective than running several songs, then several spots.
Until you can get people to pony up subscription money for OTA radio, you pretty much have to run spots. On-line services offer "free" music - some now capped at a maximum number of hours per month - because they need income just like radio. So, if you can show us that ANY interruption causes a tune-out, the rest of us radio guys would sure like to see that study.