It seems to me that both broadcast radio and TV need to find ways to counter those arguments, because at the rate that things are going the only audience that they're going to have left in any significant quantities is going to be those who are over 54. I saw some statistics regarding the average age of viewers for broadcast TV programs and how rapidly those average ages have increased in a very short period of time (five or six years) -- it's not that younger people aren't watching these shows, it's just that they're watching through streaming services instead of broadcast (or cable) channels. I don't get the impression that radio's average audience age is going up quite as fast, but it is going up.
So what are broadcasters going to do when 90% of the available audience is 55+? Chasing the splinter that is under that age isn't going to impress those advertisers that want young viewers and listeners much, so broadcasters are going to have a figure out a way of pitching advertisers on the value of the audience that they can get. An audience that has a lot of discretionary income and substantial amounts of personal wealth. An audience that may not buy diapers and baby food anymore and which may not be persuadable on what brand of deodorant to use -- but which certainly does spend money on things like cars, travel, and dining out.
Here's the problem, Tom:
Let's agree to the discretionary income and personal wealth , though I know a lot of people who have a chunk of money but live like all they have is their Social Security check because they might surprise themselves and live to 100.
And I know a lot more with modest savings who ARE living on their Social Security check. The national average SS check is $1,904 a month. The absolute max---someone who averaged a six-figure salary for the past 35 years---is $3,800 a month (that bumps up to $4,873 if that person waited until age 70 to start collecting the benefit).
Let's assume that you and I are in that lucky first group, doing well and willing to splurge here and there. In other words, we're not going to stop going out to dinner, traveling domestically and abroad and we're not gonna die driving the car we bought when we were 60.
Okay.
When was the last time seeing a car advertisement prompted you to take an action that ended in you making a purchase of any car---much less
that car?
What sort of advertising would a restaurant have to do to get you to go there?
So much of both of those categories are word of mouth and research---friends and reviews in the case of cars, friends, Yelp! and the county health department restaurant reports in the case of restaurants.
And why do we do those things? Because we've lived a while and are no longer easily persuadable by advertising. The last car I bought that got on my radar via advertising was when I was 19. That taught me.
Now, travel...that's an opportunity. A well-produced TV spot showing me some fabulous place I've never been or haven't been in a while could get me thinking about packing a suitcase.
It's gonna be pretty close to impossible, though, to get me to change my favorite airline or car rental company or hotel chain. A bad experience with either of those can screw up an otherwise wonderful vacation. So it's probably tourism bureaus that are producing that commercial and buying that time.
And then you have the question---how many people over 55 with substantial amounts of personal wealth are listening to over-the-air commercial radio and watching commercial TV?
Just because both mediums are on their way to having only a top-heavy demographic pool from which to fish doesn't mean the big fish (financially) are in that pool.
I'm 68. My wife is 61. I can count on one hand the number of broadcast TV shows we watch (usually via DVR so we can skip the commercials). The rest is streaming and has been for the better part of a decade. Same with radio---non-comm classical/jazz and my own library. Apart from that, very little commercial radio listening.
So most of the advertising is never going to reach me. And I'm not even number 999,999 on the list of the world's one million most tech-friendly seniors.