So, it's been a year since Steve Sinicropi took over as GM for Entercom's Greenville cluster, but has he made a difference?
Looking at their catalog, it doesn't seem like he has. All of the stations in the group seem to be staying the status quo with ratings more or less the same - up and down each quarter, but generally not much different.
The only thing that was "visable" was the name changes of The Planet to "Rocks" instead of New Rock and Rock 101 to "Classic Rock 101.1". I don't think those name changes did much of anything to either station's playlists. The Planet, if anything, just regressed to playing a few older songs that people joked about as not being "new rock". The station is still almost certainly Active Rock even if it does report as just Rock now.
B93.7 still has its ebbs and flows from more rhythmic leaning to more adult/pop-rock leaning with no clear direction overall. Magic, I believe, may have seen the most change with some imaging and a slightly freshened up playlist, but nothing to shout about.
With none of these stations being "power houses" by any means in the GSP market, you would think Sinicropi would have been making some bigger moves to try to change that. Any thoughts on why that hasn't occurred?
I, for one, had thought his time at Cox would have given him an edge on what Entercom would need to jump start the cluster. The former Cox stations, now under Summit, have had fairly rocky road since he left so I think the void left there has had a negative effect.
Looking at their catalog, it doesn't seem like he has. All of the stations in the group seem to be staying the status quo with ratings more or less the same - up and down each quarter, but generally not much different.
The only thing that was "visable" was the name changes of The Planet to "Rocks" instead of New Rock and Rock 101 to "Classic Rock 101.1". I don't think those name changes did much of anything to either station's playlists. The Planet, if anything, just regressed to playing a few older songs that people joked about as not being "new rock". The station is still almost certainly Active Rock even if it does report as just Rock now.
B93.7 still has its ebbs and flows from more rhythmic leaning to more adult/pop-rock leaning with no clear direction overall. Magic, I believe, may have seen the most change with some imaging and a slightly freshened up playlist, but nothing to shout about.
With none of these stations being "power houses" by any means in the GSP market, you would think Sinicropi would have been making some bigger moves to try to change that. Any thoughts on why that hasn't occurred?
I, for one, had thought his time at Cox would have given him an edge on what Entercom would need to jump start the cluster. The former Cox stations, now under Summit, have had fairly rocky road since he left so I think the void left there has had a negative effect.
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