michael hagerty said:allenv said:I understand what you are saying and I don't disagree...My thing is you can play those 500 staple songs along with 300 more to give the station some flavor..The problem with alot of stations is there is no flavor..Its vanilla or nothing and that's the issue...It has to be done within reason and cannot be based on any personal taste within the station...Thre are so many factors that go into a stations failure or success and music is only part of the puzzle..Let's face it its all about the dollars..Whether its 200 songs or tweny thousand..it has to be properly promoted..your sales staff has to sell it..and you have to have good people to execute it...I don't care to play what I like..I can do that at home..I want to please listeners and clients. I will say this one more time the #1 compliant I hear is from listeners is it seems like I hear the same songs on the radio everyday... and well if you play_____ by Fleetwood Mac why don't you play____________ by Fleetwood Mac...We owe the people an intelligent answer to that question and giving them a bunch of research shows____ is not a good enough answer in my opinion if we answer them at all.
Adding 300 tracks to a base of 500 means that just under 38% of your songs don't test as well as the others (or else you'd have been playing them all along).
To do that to a station that's doing well in ratings and revenue is like walking into the control room of a nuclear power plant and pushing a third of the buttons just to find out what they do.
RIN3GUY said:michael hagerty said:allenv said:I understand what you are saying and I don't disagree...My thing is you can play those 500 staple songs along with 300 more to give the station some flavor..The problem with alot of stations is there is no flavor..Its vanilla or nothing and that's the issue...It has to be done within reason and cannot be based on any personal taste within the station...Thre are so many factors that go into a stations failure or success and music is only part of the puzzle..Let's face it its all about the dollars..Whether its 200 songs or tweny thousand..it has to be properly promoted..your sales staff has to sell it..and you have to have good people to execute it...I don't care to play what I like..I can do that at home..I want to please listeners and clients. I will say this one more time the #1 compliant I hear is from listeners is it seems like I hear the same songs on the radio everyday... and well if you play_____ by Fleetwood Mac why don't you play____________ by Fleetwood Mac...We owe the people an intelligent answer to that question and giving them a bunch of research shows____ is not a good enough answer in my opinion if we answer them at all.
Adding 300 tracks to a base of 500 means that just under 38% of your songs don't test as well as the others (or else you'd have been playing them all along).
To do that to a station that's doing well in ratings and revenue is like walking into the control room of a nuclear power plant and pushing a third of the buttons just to find out what they do.
Michael,
Stations with a "very conservative" playlist end up with much faster burnout. Such is the case with KJMK in Joplin. In spite of their high ratings, here's what's going on there now, according to their own Facebook comments:
(anonymous listener) "I love that you have added "Every Time I Think Of You" & "Ticket To Ride"! We listeners love newly added music! I especially love both these groups! Thanks!!"
Classic Hits 93.9 "You are welcome. We've always had them, but we rest some of the hits from time to time to keep them fresh. More "Freshness" coming soon."
Now if a groups of songs has already been scientifically selected to be among those "elite" few songs worthy enough for heavier (28 to 36-hour) rotation, why the need to ever have to "rest" them??? The only answer is because by their too frequent airplay the station is making people sick of some songs even though they "tested well"! And chances are, the "rested" songs are not the only ones which are annoying their listeners. But if more of the "fresh" songs (which had probably "tested" less well) had been in rotation all along, then perhaps listeners (and DJs/PDs as well) would not be growing weary of their skimpy library.
PirateJohnny said:In the days of contemporary Top 40 radio, there were usually three or more groups of current songs with a different rotation rate for each group. How many "oldies" stations group all the songs into one group with the same rotation rate and how many create different groups (and not just based on decade) with different rotation rates? Wouldn't that solve some of the more common complaints?
After joining in this discussion in all the threads in which it appears I believe we will never convince us to change our minds.
PirateJohnny said:In the days of contemporary Top 40 radio, there were usually three or more groups of current songs with a different rotation rate for each group. How many "oldies" stations group all the songs into one group with the same rotation rate and how many create different groups (and not just based on decade) with different rotation rates? Wouldn't that solve some of the more common complaints?
After joining in this discussion in all the threads in which it appears I believe we will never convince us to change our minds.
CTListener said:PirateJohnny said:In the days of contemporary Top 40 radio, there were usually three or more groups of current songs with a different rotation rate for each group. How many "oldies" stations group all the songs into one group with the same rotation rate and how many create different groups (and not just based on decade) with different rotation rates? Wouldn't that solve some of the more common complaints?
After joining in this discussion in all the threads in which it appears I believe we will never convince us to change our minds.
Nor will it convince the radio professionals to change their minds, and soon the whole discussion will be moot, as all the music central to this marathon debate will be too old to play for a "sellable" audience. Unless the next generations will take over and argue that there should be more by Jewel on their local classic hits station than "You Were Meant For Me" (currently the only Jewel song WDRC-FM plays).
semoochie said:Up until about 1987 or so, Oldies stations generally went in short spurts. Suddenly, the music was available and everyone tuned in for awhile, until they got tired of the old songs. The ratings petered out and the station changed format because the audience was still too young and fickle. There are exceptions but that was the norm.
RIN3GUY said:OK, we have designated terms of "powers," which every station plays, and "stiffs," which no station plays, but we also need to find a term for all the other songs which could be played and should be played but usually aren't, such as per my list on page 104. These are the songs which give personality and provide variety, making a station more than just another corporate clone or zombie. Such a group of songs, if sizeable enough, will also significantly assist in retaining listener interest, preventing so-called burnout or fatigue and the need to have to "rest" erstwhile "power" hits.
Right now we're really enjoying the "all-request lunch hour" on 'Big Oldies 107.3,' Richmond, Va.![]()
RIN3GUY said:OK, we have designated terms of "powers," which every station plays, and "stiffs," which no station will play, but we also need to find a term for all the other songs which could be played and should be played but usually aren't, such as per my list on page 104.
These are the songs which give personality and provide variety, making a station more than just another corporate clone or zombie.
Such a group of songs, if sizeable enough, will also significantly assist in retaining listener interest, preventing so-called burnout or fatigue and eliminating the need to have to "rest" erstwhile "power" hits.
As I've mentioned many times, in perceptual research, the stations that get the best attribute scores for maximum variety are short-list CHRs. Variety is not " a lot of songs" but, instead, "songs I all like".
This listener comment from a perceptual on a failing AOR has always stuck with me...
"What makes you listen to (station A) more than (station B)?"
"(Station B [ours]) plays too many weird songs."
"What music is weird to you?"
"Stuff I've never heard before."
And that is why you don't play stiff records for personality and variety.
You might play a deep cut from a core artist as part of a special feature, properly promoted and supported by a more familiar cut on either side of it, but you'll never go deep for the sake of going deep if you want to have an audience. You can't pay the bills on the 5 guys who dig your favorite stiffs unless you're streaming to the world on Shoutcast and it's only costing you $25/month to get 6 listeners, one of which is you.
Heck, even on Shoutcast, the times I get the most listeners are the times when I play nothing but the hits.
This listener comment from a perceptual on a failing AOR has always stuck with me...
"Stuff I've never heard before."
And some schmuck thinks that 'life's too short" to hear Young At Heart, eh? Wow.
So the station's clients thought the station should focus on only the hits...but what did the listeners[/i] think?