That was the provocative headline on the cover of Talkers magazine, over a year ago.
Last week, at the massive, mind-boggling, Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, it was astonishingly clear: music radio is screwed.
NOW, THE STATION THAT PLAYS THE MOST MUSIC LOSES.
Playing “the most music” has been SO axiomatic to music radio stations, for SO long, that it was a common jingle lyric in the 60s on many of what are today’s News/Talk stations.
AMs dropped music when FM receivers proliferated; and music FM had a pretty good run; until iPod, satellite radio, and other new-tech dislodged radio as a music delivery system.
Now, no matter how few commercials an FM plays, iPod and that thousand song phone play fewer. And ALL the songs that phone and iPod play are listeners’ favorites. That’s progress, and radio shouldn’t take it personally. Downloads have obsoleted CDs.
If you’re a music station, that song you’re playing...right now? You own it even less than a Sean Hannity affiliate owns Sean. That song, and Sean, are also on satellite radio anyway. How about Rush Limbaugh? Like music, Rush is also on iPod...and streaming...and using affiliates’ air to lure listeners away from real-time radio listening, since Dittocam audio is asynchronous to what’s coming-out-the-speaker of all those dutiful E.I.B. Network affiliates.
Whether there will still be music radio stations in 5 or 10 years remains to be seen. Fellow consultants who specialize in music radio tell me of the importance they are attaching to what their client stations do between-the-songs.
WHAT ALL OF THIS MEANS TO AM/FM RADIO?
1. It has never been easier to cost-justify good local programming. Offer more than listeners can get anywhere else. IMPORTANT: NOT boring local news or arcane local political topics. Relevance and convenience are paramount.
2. BE-KNOWN-AS-the-button-to-push for your content. Invest in off-air promotion that tells people not-yet-listening what they’re missing. Then, when they tune-in, deliver; and package, with on-air promos that “take ownership” of the role you play in listeners’ lives. Tip: Play defense, with overt imaging about being car radio.
3. Podcast! Be on iPod, and anything else that plays MP3s. Make the station’s web site a download depot for appropriate on-air programming; and “more about” on-air programming; and programming that never aired, but was promoted on-air. Offering non-perishable content on-demand yields more ROI on programming expense, and gives your advertisers more reach and targeting opportunities. If someone from your station will be attending the Radio Advertising Bureau convention in Dallas in February or the NAB convention in Las Vegas in April, tell ‘em not to miss my session “Revenue...Right Under Your Nose!” I will outline specific strategies.
4. Get programming on the phone, any/every way you can. Dust-off the weatherphone, a 60s/70s radio icon. And what other content can listeners-on-the-go “Press 2” to hear?
See and hear more from CES2007 at http://members.aol.com/cookeh/CES07.html, including transcripts/video/audio of keynotes. And DON'T MISS the "Endless Caruso One-liners" video you can click-to-watch. It's a hoot...and evidence that, for SMART stations, new-tech can be much more opportune than threatening.
HC
www.HollandCooke.com
Last week, at the massive, mind-boggling, Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, it was astonishingly clear: music radio is screwed.
NOW, THE STATION THAT PLAYS THE MOST MUSIC LOSES.
Playing “the most music” has been SO axiomatic to music radio stations, for SO long, that it was a common jingle lyric in the 60s on many of what are today’s News/Talk stations.
AMs dropped music when FM receivers proliferated; and music FM had a pretty good run; until iPod, satellite radio, and other new-tech dislodged radio as a music delivery system.
Now, no matter how few commercials an FM plays, iPod and that thousand song phone play fewer. And ALL the songs that phone and iPod play are listeners’ favorites. That’s progress, and radio shouldn’t take it personally. Downloads have obsoleted CDs.
If you’re a music station, that song you’re playing...right now? You own it even less than a Sean Hannity affiliate owns Sean. That song, and Sean, are also on satellite radio anyway. How about Rush Limbaugh? Like music, Rush is also on iPod...and streaming...and using affiliates’ air to lure listeners away from real-time radio listening, since Dittocam audio is asynchronous to what’s coming-out-the-speaker of all those dutiful E.I.B. Network affiliates.
Whether there will still be music radio stations in 5 or 10 years remains to be seen. Fellow consultants who specialize in music radio tell me of the importance they are attaching to what their client stations do between-the-songs.
WHAT ALL OF THIS MEANS TO AM/FM RADIO?
1. It has never been easier to cost-justify good local programming. Offer more than listeners can get anywhere else. IMPORTANT: NOT boring local news or arcane local political topics. Relevance and convenience are paramount.
2. BE-KNOWN-AS-the-button-to-push for your content. Invest in off-air promotion that tells people not-yet-listening what they’re missing. Then, when they tune-in, deliver; and package, with on-air promos that “take ownership” of the role you play in listeners’ lives. Tip: Play defense, with overt imaging about being car radio.
3. Podcast! Be on iPod, and anything else that plays MP3s. Make the station’s web site a download depot for appropriate on-air programming; and “more about” on-air programming; and programming that never aired, but was promoted on-air. Offering non-perishable content on-demand yields more ROI on programming expense, and gives your advertisers more reach and targeting opportunities. If someone from your station will be attending the Radio Advertising Bureau convention in Dallas in February or the NAB convention in Las Vegas in April, tell ‘em not to miss my session “Revenue...Right Under Your Nose!” I will outline specific strategies.
4. Get programming on the phone, any/every way you can. Dust-off the weatherphone, a 60s/70s radio icon. And what other content can listeners-on-the-go “Press 2” to hear?
See and hear more from CES2007 at http://members.aol.com/cookeh/CES07.html, including transcripts/video/audio of keynotes. And DON'T MISS the "Endless Caruso One-liners" video you can click-to-watch. It's a hoot...and evidence that, for SMART stations, new-tech can be much more opportune than threatening.
HC
www.HollandCooke.com