Major Corporate Radio Stations generally subscribe to these ratings and get and can use the exact data. That data is what agencies
use to find their best target(s.) Generally, agencies know where to put their dollars, even without the numbers, but its a valued working
relationship.
Smaller radio companies may choose to buy the book, as well. Radio stations can only use the info IF they pay. This
does help in selling local advertising, IF* the numbers/ratings look good. *That's a whole other contentious can of worms.
Often these stations (the few stand alones and/or mom and pops) will find a format that works locally for them. They know they will
not usually get tons of agency business, if any. So this is usually why these stations cater to a niche so they can/or have to work the local
market dollars. There is often less radio competition (and usually profit) at this level. Literally two different business models. Then
you have the EMF's and other religious or non-profit segment. I contend, this really hurts the overall radio dial and options for listeners,
but helps local driven stations with less "commercial" competition.
As mentioned above, radio is a diminishing desire of marketing and agencies are keenly aware of this.
Since the majority of the conversation has been mostly about WABC, wadio, apply some of you "thinking" to this specifically for WABC or
simliar situations:
The audience is not agency friendly, or in the demographic, but there is a loyal audience that does, sadly, reduce a bit each day.
JK has a decent value advertising tool with this station. Plus, IF he can get advertisers that coincide with his businesses, get political buys
and use his station as his shameless self promotion write-off mechanism, he's in the money.
I said when he bought this station, that in a way, he got a fantastic "deal." That "deal "would not apply to a different type of owner of this
exact station, like Cumulus.
I believe this is a rare large market success story where "the little guy" is living his radio dream. He is saying his thing. He does not answer to the accounting
department or mafia money backers that have hacked up so many other radio stations. He doesn't answer to anyone else. Except MAYBE the FCC and
his wife if he says the wrong on the air. Seems like a pretty decent place to be, if done right. I'd call it the All American Dream. Even in 2025.