atlantaboy said:Clear Channel and Cumulus are both quick to flip formats, at least in Atlanta, and neither corporation is even close to being "in dire financial straits"
That is funny. If it weren't for the thousands of people, including many friends, who work for each of these companies, it would be even funnier.
What you're basically saying, I think, is that New York City has such a large population that CBS should be content with the billing that they have, since coming in 20th in New York is more profitable than, say, coming in 1st in Providence, for example - so then, according to what you're saying, extremely large cities should have very few format flips, relative to medium-sized cities - I'm not sure if that's true on not...it's just the first time I've heard that in the couple years I've been on this board
What I am saying is that profitability is a powerful deterrent to change. And in New York City, the second largest revenue market, there is enough available billing to sustain stations in the lower tiers and to keep them profitable.
In Fargo, where the whole market bills about 1/3 of the billing of the single highest billing New York station, it is a harder task to live with lower ratings and lower billing. But the smaller markets have a lot less agency based transactional business, so in some cases low listenership stations can do OK despite it all.
If you look at format changes in the top 10 markets (and those 10 MSAs represent nearly 30% of all the country's radio revenue) you can see that they tend to come following a sale or when it's obvious that the station is losing money.
In the first case, a buyer may acquire a station with a specific format in mind. ESPN comes to mind... they are willing to blow up existing revenue streams to fulfill a desire to be on a facility in a particular market.
In the second case, a company has a station that is losing money and shows no growth potential. They try something new. Or a station is not doing well, and there is a bigger need from a cluster perspective... such as protecting WSB with an FM.
Taking a continuously owned station that is producing good cash flow and wiping out the billings, incurring startup costs and having no guarantee is not a good idea in this 30%-lower-revenue-than-in-2007 world of radio. There is far less margin for error, and that scares most people.