Interstate 78 said:
DavidEduardo said:
casual observer said:
Excellent analysis from Dave Van Dyke in today's (9/26) issue about how PPM is killing the Smooth Jazz format. If you're a fan of the format, this is a must read.
That analysis is somewhat misguided. What has killed Smooth Jazz as a commercial radio format is more accurate measurement which showed that the long listening times in the diary were exaggerated.
Smooth Jazz was killed by reality.
The diary was based on measuring memory of listening. Smooth Jazz always had a small cume with long, long listening times. In the diary, they got good shares in the past due to the time spent listening, but the PPM showed that while people thought they had listened
all day, they had really listened for 4 or 5 intervals of perhaps 20 minutes or so.
Ok, assuming you are correct, then the next logical question is WHY were people only listening for 4 or 5 intervals of 20 minutes? Because the music mix was crap and they realized that if they listened longer, they'd hear the same songs over and over and over. We can't blame the loss of radio smooth jazz just on the fact that people weren't listening long enough. WHY weren't they listening long enough? Maybe if stations played more than 200 songs, they'd listen longer. I am a teacher and I've polled students many times.
Do you listen to the radio? No.
Why not? Because they don't play enough music.
Would you listen to it if they played more than the same 200 songs? Absolutely.
There you have it. Today's youth have the right answers. Like it or not. People will try to justify how consultants didn't ruin the format, but that's exactly what happened. Not that people didn't listen enough. They didn't listen because it wasn't worth listening. And I think this goes for other formats too. Not just smooth jazz.
See, 78, this is where you have it all wrong. You are concerned about the LISTENER and the MUSIC and not the ADVERTISER. Ad agencies are like Clear Channel, they see radio as a device for delivering advertising and nothing else. They are too stupid to see that this is what is driving younger listeners, the very ones they want, to their mp3 players.
As David has said, the agencies hate 55+ listeners because they are not easily manipulated by one or two commercials like the 18-34 crowd, so formats like smooth jazz, which if programmed properly, could bring in targeted dollars, but it would take more commercials.
Of course, this is the very idea that is killing terrestrial radio, but the greedheads at the agencies that control major-market radio could care less.