I can't tell you how many times I've read sentences just like that one. "This is why radio is in trouble. Because all you dumb asses who work in the business don't do what I want."
Without that sort of stuff, this board would be empty.
I can't tell you how many times I've read sentences just like that one. "This is why radio is in trouble. Because all you dumb asses who work in the business don't do what I want."
And listening to what the audience wants (which is a perpetually shifting, changing thing) is as critical to a radio station's quest for listeners as listening to customers is to a company attempting to sell a product.
It is true that radio's "customers", in the strictest sense, are the people who pay the bills -- the advertisers. However, radio gets money from advertisers by attracting listeners to their stations. Then, they rent those listeners. So, even though technically speaking, listeners aren't "customers", when it comes to attracting listeners, the principles involved are extremely similar to the principles involved in attracting paying customers to buy your product. So, to be pedantically nitpicking about it, it is erroneous to refer to listeners as "customers". However, if any radio station hopes to get advertisers to rent their audience, the radio station has to attract that audience. And listening to what the audience wants (which is a perpetually shifting, changing thing) is as critical to a radio station's quest for listeners as listening to customers is to a company attempting to sell a product.
And that's why radio has been commissioning ratings and other research projects for about the last 85 years.
Let's not forget that Rush Limbaugh is an Oxycondin drug addict. That's how he lost his hearing.
Advertisers are the customers of the sales department. Listeners are the customers of the programming department.
Radio has been commissioning bad research for 85 years. They don't hire real researchers.
They hire consultants, whose main business is selling their advice.
And their research always seems to support their advice.
Add to that broadcasters are no better than the consultants and have decided what they want to do. So the consultant/supplier makes sure to tell them what they want to hear.
Radio is.
Go ahead. Keep parroting the industry line.
I'd just love to know where you come up with the totally mistaken ideas of how research is done, the role of consultants and the other related lies and distortions you have posted of late.
Through 25 years as a marketing researcher, and dealing with people like you as clients. The one thing I never figured out: Do people like you really believe the industry BS or do you just spout the industry line because you tell people what they want to hear? Maybe you shouldn't be paying attention to all those old trade magazines you post. Sol Taishoff and the rest, down to Michael Harrison today, are hos and tell people what they want to hear.
They don't hire real researchers. They hire consultants, whose main business is selling their advice.
So you're saying that Rush, while being the product, is also a consumer. Or is it customer?
btw, it's Oxycontin.
Well, I am not a user. Are you ?
Quote Originally Posted by flybynight
So you're saying that Rush, while being the product, is also a consumer. Or is it customer?
btw, it's Oxycontin.
That's why the advertising industry has left (excluding bottom feeders). That's why much of the audience has left. As long as people like you keep saying, "What, me worry?" radio is doomed.
Eduardo: I see. What you don't want to hear is "untruth" and "hyperbole." Radio has few "fine people" left and it has demeaned itself beyond anyone's ability to demean it. That's why the advertising industry has left (excluding bottom feeders). That's why much of the audience has left. As long as people like you keep saying, "What, me worry?" radio is doomed.
And yes, I think a lot of it is just plain wrong. The Edison research that came out a couple months ago was wrong. They drew the wrong conclusions from their information. And I didn't agree with Fred Jacobs either. Just because people do research doesn't mean we nod our heads in agreement. They don't tell us what WE want to hear. Sometimes they tell us what THEY want to hear. But that's true of a lot of things. That doesn't mean we shouldn't read it. Typically, these things are presented at conferences. We debate and assess their methodologies. At the end of the day, we compile lots of studies, some from within broadcasting, and some from outside the industry, to reach our conclusions. But a lot of my comments here come from practical applications: Watching what stations do and how listeners react.
What does get seen is the stuff you mention... the presentations at conventions and conferences.
Let's not forget that Rush Limbaugh is an Oxycondin drug addict. That's how he lost his hearing.