Mike Walker said:
Put UNIQUE THINGS ON HD, things not available anywhere else (gay/lesbian programming, tech news, women's issues (check out Oprah Radio on XM!), and so many others!) HUGE segments of this population hear NOTHING on terrestrial radio that "speaks to them". Suddenly HUNDREDS of new "channels" are available! If we can't turn THESE "lemons" into lemonade, frankly we deserve to fail!
Good points. There are a lot of specialty formats that aren't often found on radio these days. I have no idea why they are not finding homes on HD-2 channels. Formats vary from market to market, but Standards, Classical, Jazz (smooth or real), Oldies, Beautiful Music, Show Tunes, Black Adult Oldies (Motown, etc), Celtic, Real Country, Gospel, Americana, plus all kinds of talk formats seem pretty obvious. Most, of them aren't that hard to do, or they can be picked up in syndication. These formats may not have huge audiences, but they will have
very loyal audiences. Right now HD really needs that. It sure doesn't need "more of the same stuff we do on our regular channel."
After loading up the automation computer to run one of these formats, the next step is to tell people about it. That shouldn’t be that hard to do. Even some form of guerilla marketing might work. Since you are targeting a very distinct segment of the market, it doesn’t need to be a huge campaign, just a well targeted one. There is no point in telling a bunch of teenage head-bangers about your new Gospel station, but you might target a lot of churches.
Basically a campaign from “Marketing 101” ought to produce results. Right now, very few "regular folks" know anything about HD, and if they do, they usually think they are listening to it, and the RDS display in their car radio is living proof.
In fact, selling HD may be a part of the problem. Why not sell a radio station format? Forget the “HD” part. People listen to ‘radio.” They could give a rat’s a$$ how the signal gets to their speakers.
For a business that is mostly about marketing, to date, this one goes down with "New Coke." Kinda sad, actually.