while some of your comments are valid as it regards formatting, the question asked was "do you think it was a good or bad year for radio in the cape market?" By your responses, its clear that many of you, if not all, don't even work in the market. So how can you provide insight based on "whenever I visit" or "when I was down there last?"
Here's why the year 2009 was horrible for the Cape market.
Two of the top three radio companies, in an effort to reduce budget, lost non-traditional revenue opportunities, and trimmed staff to stay above water. The third declared bankruptcy to re-strure its debt and avoid firing its employees.
So naturally, too many radio people lost their jobs. Not because of performance, but because of economics. A number of full-timers were fired, or "let go", because of the insurmountable cost to hold on to a full-time employee. and then, because they were desperate for work, these same people were re-hired on an hourly basis with no benefits. Some were hired part-time, others not re-hired at all. We're talking about people who support their families, not part-timers who supplement income. The loss of these employees was devastating to the market.
the economy, eroding sales forcasts unlike ever before in the market, also made sales managers think desperately. As a result, advertisers were taken advantage of by sales teams desperate for revenue who sold them rate instead of reach. cape advertisers, already a not-so-trusting bunch, lost faith and respect for sales in general because their ads were not working, and radio lost a number traditional revenue streams from businesses who instead just hung on to their money because they have no idea if they can open their doors in 2010. Businesses hurt themselves by not advertising and maintaining their market share, and they got screwed by being convinced that buying at a cheaper rate was a way to save money, even though those spots were not even reaching their target demo.
So yes, 2009 was really bad for the cape market. you guys who don't work or live here don't get that this is an economy-based market, not a format-based market. We choose first to serve the community, not break the "hotest" format. And right now, serving the community is the hardest job we've ever had to do.
So please, stop complaining about the fact that there's too much rock or not enough chr, or whether or not the cape will ever have an urban station again. we're trying to help businesses stay alive down here, trying to help people keep their jobs and put food on their tables. That's all there is too it. We don't care about what formats you think should be here. We're just happy to have jobs in this lousy economy and we're trying to help the rest of the community keep theirs too.