Do you think radio is a declining medium? Not at 7-Eleven and Walmart. They have their own in-store radio networks.
Most 7-Eleven, Speedway and Stripes stores are gearing up for "Gulp Radio" which will play music and run ads for store promotions and retail items (described as "value-added messaging"). Some 4,000 stores already have it but "Inside Radio" says 12,000 stores will be playing it by the end of July. Each store radio will have a monitoring device to raise or lower the volume depending on the ambient noise in the store. The chain says 13 million customers come into a 7-Eleven, Speedway or Stripes each day. (90% of sales are still in-store, not delivery.)
And have you listened to Walmart's in-store radio station? I hear it from time to time when shopping, although only in some sections of the store. Most of the time, I don't hear music in Walmart. But I think it's funny when I hear the DJ telling me it's Wednesday morning and he's glad I'm in a Walmart doing some shopping. The DJ tells us his name and has a Top 40-style delivery.
Most 7-Eleven, Speedway and Stripes stores are gearing up for "Gulp Radio" which will play music and run ads for store promotions and retail items (described as "value-added messaging"). Some 4,000 stores already have it but "Inside Radio" says 12,000 stores will be playing it by the end of July. Each store radio will have a monitoring device to raise or lower the volume depending on the ambient noise in the store. The chain says 13 million customers come into a 7-Eleven, Speedway or Stripes each day. (90% of sales are still in-store, not delivery.)
And have you listened to Walmart's in-store radio station? I hear it from time to time when shopping, although only in some sections of the store. Most of the time, I don't hear music in Walmart. But I think it's funny when I hear the DJ telling me it's Wednesday morning and he's glad I'm in a Walmart doing some shopping. The DJ tells us his name and has a Top 40-style delivery.
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