J
Julius Leonard Marx
Guest
Shoot From Hip said:Read my post carefully. I said "If" the station is still under construction. I don't work there; I don't have a clue. But, I do know that you don't waste marketing resources in December for a format that's just gone on the air and at the end of a ratings period. I'm not there, I haven't listened, and frankly I couldn't care less. But I do know a little about when to market and when to lay low. And, if they are in fact still making adjustments, as someone suggested, then they are wise not to invite people in to the tent yet. Who knows-- they may not even have a marketing budget.
PS-- You seem extraordinarily confident that your solutions are what any and every stations needs to do. Could you please identify a success story that demonstrates your strategies at work in the real (vs. theoretical) world? Thanks.
I am not saying what every station should do. I am saying a station in a given situation needs to promote itself. I am also saying that promoting the station on a radio board and on liberal talk blogs won't help. One of the problems other liberal talk stations have faced is nobody knew they were there. Given their dial position, and the incidence of digital tuners, there is little chance people will stumble across them. Promotion in their case is not strictly tied to ratings periods but to create awareness they exist. Later they can do promotion to remind people to listen (while the diaries are out).
If they don't have a marketing budget, that would be cause for concern about the future of this station. I am not a huge believe in "if you build it, they will come."
So far, about the only type of promotion liberal talk has come up with are petition drives to save the station (mostly when it's already too late). It's free. It creates awareness. It gets their base activated. If they can come up with something like that before it's too late, they might have something.
If they don't have money for a marketing budget, can they afford to wait to promote it (even if fine tuning is needed, which it always is)?
As I've said before, I am interested in exchanging ideas here. Not resumes. You have disagreed with I've said. Would you agree suddenly if I posted credentials? Radio's problem is a lack of creative thought and critical judgement and instead management defers to "consultants" who market themselves based on a time they got lucky (a "success story").
PS: Mobile, I wish you guys would make up your mind. You don't like my solutions or I don't offer solutions. Which is it?