No more than two minutes of commercials, guaranteed. When this was introduced at 107.7 KNDD in Seattle, ratings spiked.
Even with no advertising at all, a station needs to play music that will appeal to sufficient listeners to make the format attract ratings and advertisers. Alternative rock in the age of rhythmic, and in one of America's most hardwired for rhythmic markets, is not that music. New York and Seattle are so demographically different as to make the comparison of KNDD and ALT 92.3 invalid. There just aren't enough alt fans, proportionally speaking, in the market to make a ratings spike significant.
Considering many who listen to modern alternative frequent streaming services, trying to emulate these services is not a bad idea. The “two minute promise” I don’t think has evolved beyond Seattle (a place where the station could afford to only run 4-6 commercials and still make decent income).
92.3 doesn’t have the history that the End does (basically everyone out in Washington knows what music 107.7 has played for nearly 30 years). In addition, totally different market demographics.
I wish them luck.
Listeners are happy, Management is happy, Suits are happy, Madison avenue is happy, they are making money,
Listeners are happy, Management is happy, Suits are happy, Madison avenue is happy, they are making money, they are the only game in town and have thousands of loyal listeners. They are going no-where, no matter what the haters speculate, a few over crowded formats in town are more likely to implode before them.
No more than two minutes of commercials, guaranteed. When this was introduced at 107.7 KNDD in Seattle, ratings spiked.
They were alternative all last year and were 15th in market billings. That's not a happy number.
Lower rated stations are not unsalable. They simply get lower rates. Good operators package up the ones that won't get consideration alone by selling them together with a must-buy station at a combo rate. This kind of technique allows what would be a very unprofitable stand-alone to ride along with bigger cluster members and make decent money.
I'm confused.
Weren't you and others, Mr. Eduardo, defending that type of performance for Entercom's 104.3 The Flounder in Miami?
One of your comments on that thread was as follows:
As far as 92.3 in NYC is concerned, reduced spot loads won't help performance much. The music the station plays has limited appeal. There is little upside potential. The now defunct station run out of a broom closet (New Rock 101.9, which was nothing more than a temporary placeholder format) had a better playlist.
That's because a lot of what they play is Indie Pop, not Rock: Panic At The Disco, Of Monsters And Men, Lana Del Rey, Twenty One Pilots, Bastille, the Lumineers, etc.Interesting to read that the station avoids using the word, "rock."
That's because a lot of what they play is Indie Pop, not Rock: Panic At The Disco, Of Monsters And Men, Lana Del Rey, Twenty One Pilots, Bastille, the Lumineers, etc.
No more than two minutes of commercials, guaranteed. When this was introduced at 107.7 KNDD in Seattle, ratings spiked.
Alt 92.3 may be gaining some traction. AllAccess reports that their current ratings are the highest since January. They are #6 18-34, ahead of WKTU.
Heard this morning on WNYL: "Last week, KTU played 1167 more minutes of commercials than Alt 92.3".
That sounds like a lot, but it averages to about 7 more minutes of commercials per hour.