MistahTroof said:Hire another consultant?! Dude, there's no money left up there: people are being fired right and left, salaries are being cut, Emmis is in desperate need of immediate cash to service their debt, and it's only a matter of time before the frequency is sold to ESPN/Disney.
The geniuses running the show at 495 Hudson have running out of ideas, chances, and cash. 101.9 is toast.
MistahTroof said:Hire another consultant?! Dude, there's no money left up there:
The geniuses running the show at 495 Hudson have running out of ideas, chances, and cash. 101.9 is toast.
UncleBozzle said:Emmis should just face the facts, blow RXP up, and make it NY's Country station. Wouldn't it be better to score 1.8 to 2.0 in the ratings and own the format? Yet they choose to keep going in a format that is so fragmented in NYC.
hamNcheese said:
adma said:p_herring said:Adama,
Not that I have a fear of 50 cent words but, do you have a point in that essay? I'm not trying to play the usual "radio sucks" cliche but the answer as to why RXP is failing is just so blatantly obvious that I can't believe we even have 7 pages of discussion around it. Their playlist is so all over the place that no listener really feels like tuning in. Granted, a radio station isn't supposed to please the listener's tastes 100% of time, but it should at least be over 50% (something RXP fails at). The classic rock fans will get annoyed at the cookie-cutter post grunge/pop songs (Matchbox 20, Staind, Lifehouse), the indie fans will be annoyed at the "corporate" acts (Aerosmith, AC/DC, Matchbox 20, etc.) while the just plain-old-average guy fans will really get annoyed with these "weird" and "out there" acts (Vampire Weekend, The National, Arcade fire, etc.) With all three types of potential listeners not tuning in, there's not much of an audience left.
Though that kind of "all over the place" playlist might have actually been a prog-into-AOR norm in the 70s, so I might assume that, as with the eternal longing for an old-style Sinatra-to-Seeds Top 40 fantasy, it's misplaced nostalgia emanating from a thoroughly ingrown and divorced-from-the-present version of what such radio "could" be. Unless perhaps there's an allpurpose "magazine format" intent, i.e. if Rolling Stone/Spin/Blender can cover it all thusly and even toss a little Beyonce into the mix without drawing blood, then why not a radio station? Easier said than done.
But the deeper point re the jam radio's in today is: to me, in 2008, said classic rock fans sound like numbskulls. Said indie fans sound like numbskulls. Said plain-old-average guy fans sound like numbskulls. Ergo, the only "rock fans" with expectations from commercial radio anymore are numbskulls. Middle-aged dolts with Juno/Bristol Palin style preggo daughters who seldom refer to a Rolling Stone/Spin/Blender/Idolator/whatever axis because all those 50 cent words make their heads hurt. Everyone else has fled to superior technology; or maybe some kind of NPR/WFMU zone...
Brooklyndon said:MistahTroof said:Hire another consultant?! Dude, there's no money left up there:
The geniuses running the show at 495 Hudson have running out of ideas, chances, and cash. 101.9 is toast.
Well, presumably, they have historical research for the rock market left over from when times were good. You don't have to be a genius to dump the data into excell and age the demos five years. Only problem with that methodology is that it will always underweight the value of gen-y, and overweight the value of the boomers, so emmis would need to ballpark the income numbers. My guess is that with their data for Kiss and Hot, which, again presumably, is current, they could come up with a statistically significant number to help them make their segmentation decision.
Assuming WRXP gets its target segment right, they then have a huge differentiation and communications hurdle to overcome.
If they go gen-y they need to go digital; digital station will be its differentiation. All of the other rock stations in New York are terrestrial, you can't take them on the subway or into many apartments. Digital stations go any, and everywhere, through live streams and morning podcasts. Music liscencing fees make this product less profitable in the short run, but with audience share come economies. Initial barriers to entry are the fixed costs of technology.
If they go gen-x, they an avoid the high start up costs, but have to duke it out with KRock for a small declining market. Differentation is nuanced at best, and I see 0 value proposition for either listeners or advertisers.
If they go boomer, then they are just plain dumb. This demo is at-best less than a decade away from being on social security. Their wealth has evaporated in the last 18 months. But they do at least turn on the radio. Could be a good way to raise cash in the short run.
Perhaps an integrated strategy of flipping classic rock, using the boomer cash cow demo, which is only half retired, for the next five years, and reinvesting the earnings into the technology needed to lock in the gen-y growth demo, which is only half graduated from college, could be a long term strategy to staying afloat.
p_herring said:that begs of the age-old question: Will Millenials like you and I turn off our ipods/computers and tune into an FM station. The only way I would ever need it is if I find myself in a car for some strange reason (I live in Manhattan) or if I stumble upon a job that will only allow workers to listen to AM/FM radio (not likely).
Brooklyndon said:By the way, if you think K-Rock2 is good,
Brooklyndon said:p_herring said:that begs of the age-old question: Will Millenials like you and I turn off our ipods/computers and tune into an FM station. The only way I would ever need it is if I find myself in a car for some strange reason (I live in Manhattan) or if I stumble upon a job that will only allow workers to listen to AM/FM radio (not likely).
P_Herring, I think you just asked the $64000 question.
My answer is that radio stations need alter their distribution channels in order to penetrate the millenial market. Operating costs, per song licensing fees, are higher for streaming / podcast formats, so margins will be squeezed somewhat, but reach will be global, so overall returns per station will be higher.
By the way, if you think K-Rock2 is good, check out WFNX's top-quality stream. Music is great, and even though they are a Boston station they are running spots for New York companies. The future is now.
http://wfnx.com/images/flashArea_25.jpg
p_herring said:Brooklyndon said:p_herring said:that begs of the age-old question: Will Millenials like you and I turn off our ipods/computers and tune into an FM station. The only way I would ever need it is if I find myself in a car for some strange reason (I live in Manhattan) or if I stumble upon a job that will only allow workers to listen to AM/FM radio (not likely).
P_Herring, I think you just asked the $64000 question.
My answer is that radio stations need alter their distribution channels in order to penetrate the millenial market. Operating costs, per song licensing fees, are higher for streaming / podcast formats, so margins will be squeezed somewhat, but reach will be global, so overall returns per station will be higher.
By the way, if you think K-Rock2 is good, check out WFNX's top-quality stream. Music is great, and even though they are a Boston station they are running spots for New York companies. The future is now.
http://wfnx.com/images/flashArea_25.jpg
I always love listening to 'FNX when I go up to Boston. I think the mix that they, BCN and WAAF can offer rock fans is great. There's not TOO much cross-over between them. BCN is obviously the most boring of the three but I'm sure Infinity keeps it around because it's a heritage station.
I've also noticed that K-Rock2 has been a little streamlined as of late (throwing in more obvious gold cuts) but still sounds much freshes than anything on the NYC dial.
Brooklyndon said:By the way, if you think K-Rock2 is good, check out WFNX's top-quality stream. Music is great, and even though they are a Boston station they are running spots for New York companies. The future is now.
http://wfnx.com/images/flashArea_25.jpg
neo11 said:How about you provide us with proof that RXP is "rocking" NYC. So far, there has been absolutely nothing in the ratings or in any articles published to indicate that RXP is coming anywhere close to "rocking" NYC. In fact, I seem to recall RXP not showing much of an improvement in the PPM's vs. the diaries, which obviously does not bode well for the station.
deadman said:neo11 said:How about you provide us with proof that RXP is "rocking" NYC. So far, there has been absolutely nothing in the ratings or in any articles published to indicate that RXP is coming anywhere close to "rocking" NYC. In fact, I seem to recall RXP not showing much of an improvement in the PPM's vs. the diaries, which obviously does not bode well for the station.
The phones are lit non-stop and from my NYC source the PPM data is great. The proof will be released soon.
deadman said:The proof will be released soon.