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BEST way to deliver airchecks?

E

eddiemahoney

Guest
CD/resume package through regular mail OR e-mail?

It seems e-mail, while convenient, is too easily missed or deleted.

Snail mail is less convenient.

What are TALK PD's more receptive to?
 
E-mail. And send a link to the mp3 online so you don't tie up my e-mail with a big download. If I'm interested and looking for someone, I'll listen to it; if not, sending an unsolicited CD won't make any difference.
 
I prefer three ways, actually. One you'll not know about, another you won't know how much about and the third -- I'll call and ask for it.

1. Email IF I have an opening or not. Tell me where your link online is, along with your resume. MP3 to the online link. I probably won't take much time to listen to you at the station(s) for more than five minutes. That's not fair to you nor is the end-all that justifies your talent and ability. It's just an introduction, so, understand that.

2. I will respond, no matter what ... and I'll tell you that upfront. I think we owe applicants that. So few, though, do. But at the same time, that doesn't mean you should call me every 20 minutes and say "Did you get my package / Did you listen to my mp3." If I want more, you'll be the first to know if your aircheck interested me and why or why not.

3. I will call and ask for a CD or cassette, unscoped of 30 minutes or so of "current" programming if I need more. I don't want to hear your station format, I want to hear you and how you relate, interact, inform and entertain. So, get into it upfront. I want this to drive around and listen to you coming out of my dashboard, probably at the time I'm most interested in putting you on the air on my station and quite possibly on my office stereo at home, as well. Listening to where our listeners are when they'll be listening to you on our air.

The more compelling, creative and interesting ... the better.

4. It probably should come as no surprise that if you're currently working, I'll ask you for your station stream and when you're on. Then, I'll listen to you at length when you don't know it to get you "not playing to the recorder." I listen to most applicants on their streams, in fact.

If you're "on the beach" -- see #3.

I don't recommend sending unsolicited "packages." If my station has an opening ... jump on it. If you want to know if I have an opening, let me know by email or letter how I can reach you AND how I can hear you in the inquiry. Not "do you have any openings?" If I do ... I'll want to hear you. If I don't, I'd still like to hear you anyway.

And if we talk and it's suggested sending something like a CD ... that means I'm real interested. Get it to me professionally and within three days to a week, max. I can appreciate those who send things overnight, but I'm not interested in how much you spend, but how soon and efficiently you can get it to me.

Good luck!
 
Thank you.
 
“THE NEW AUDITION TAPE”

If you’re a free agent, or if you’re seeking to fill an opening, you’ve likely found slim pickins’ out there.

Ironically, radio-people-looking-for-jobs and jobs-looking-for-people have never had a harder time finding each other than now, as Consolidation V1 morphs into Consolidation V2. That very juncture is part of the problem. With so many stations changing hands, and new owners seeking economies-of-scale, and corporate cultures melding (or not), hiring is often frozen, and at least cool.

But things aren’t getting tricky, they’re getting trickier. Radio’s talent pool had already gotten real shallow since automation, syndication, voicetracking, and other shortcuts enabled owners to pay sky-high mortgages by paying less for programming.

The timing couldn’t have been worse. Just as music stations upped spot load, along came iPod. Just as Talk Radio was sounding like a seamless, national, homogenized, conservative political rant, along came podcasts, an exotic variety of niche programming. Research referenced on page 6 demonstrates that online listening is now mainstream.

And whatever satellite radio’s future, Sirius and XM marketing have certainly articulated and enhanced negative perceptions about AM/FM radio’s limited programming repertoire.

While technology may seem to hamper the hiring process, it can also help it along.

Smart stations aren’t just feeding audio to a transmitter. Beyond archiving on-air programming for on-demand listening, many stations are producing “other stuff” for online consumption. Already we are hearing people who staff the station’s web site graduate to on-air work. Often they’re entry level people wearing multiple hats on the promotion/production/ webmaster side. They develop a following, the boss knows them to be enthused and dependable, and one thing leads to another.

The station’s Internet operation is the New Age “campus radio station” or “all-night show,” where radio’s Baby Boom generation broke-in (starting the turntable at the wrong speed). And beyond GROWING talent online, stations are now FINDING talent there, perhaps by identifying local podcasters with a gazillion MySpace “Friends.”

If you’re a job-seeker, you should be using the Internet as “the new audition tape.” In Olden Times, talent supply exceeded demand, and wily applicants did what it took to maneuver their manila envelope to the top of the PD’s stack. Each job-applied-for cost the applicant $X in materials + postage, plus the-time-it-took-to-get-there...often only to get lost among umpteen others in a big cardboard box.

Now, talent tout their acts online, making airchecks, photos, resumes, and references available on-demand. And a person’s web site can convey lots more about the person than what-got-stuffed-into-that-manila.

And employers can surf the Internet unobtrusively, without spooking employees by running Help Wanted ads, or getting spotted having lunch with an applicant trying to stay “under the radar.”

Best of all, this new marketplace is FREE. Do-in-yourself blog hubs like www.Blogger.com, www.Wordpress.com, and www.Podomatic.com come with all the “plumbing” built-in. I built http://barbercast.podomatic.com for a free agent talk host I’m helping. If you’re looking for work, consider creating a similar page; and if you’re looking for help, poke around the blog hubs.

HAPPY HOLIDAYS,
Holland Cooke
News/Talk Specialist
McVay Media
www.HollandCooke.com
 
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