Our loads reflected the loads of all the major stations in the Boston market. CBS & Clear Channel, and Greater Media all jacked up the loads - each rationalizing the other's move.TheBigA said:Big difference between "nearly all" and one.
We have found that the length of the stopset doesn't matter. It can be one spot an hour or 20. The result is the same. A portion of the audience changes stations. The majority stay. Those who object to commercials don't care about the number. We cut back spotload 25% and they didn't even notice. In fact they thought we increased the number.
I'm aware of that research, and the anomalies of spotload vs. perception of spotload. I'm dubious that length doesn't matter however. Perhaps in the car, when the preset is right at your fingertips, that portion of the audience instantly changes stations on spot #1. But as I play the radio at home in the background, the radio is not in immediate reach, but after around 4 spots, i stop what i'm doing and go to change the station - unless i hear a announcement that "we're back to music in 60 seconds". Otherwise i presume i'm in for 9 more minutes of spots, which violates the listeners *and* the clients advertising in my opinion.
WCTK does 12 in a row (Providence)
Can't possibly do that every hour ?