Most of you know my feelings on PPM. Now Delilah offers hers....a very similar one to mine.
God save radio.
http://trib.al/oNqalZ8
God save radio.
http://trib.al/oNqalZ8
You can crank a Voltair up to 11 and it's still not going to save her ratings.
Delilah started out talking to 40 year old women 20 years ago, on stations designed to play music for women who didn't like the top 40 of the day.
Those women are now 60.
Delilah can either learn how to talk to today's 40 year olds.
And forget about the demo after that, because they don't own radios.
And forget about the demo after that, because they don't own radios.
Sure they do. In their cars, for one place.
And forget about the demo after that, because they don't own radios.
Most of you know my feelings on PPM. Now Delilah offers hers....a very similar one to mine.
God save radio.
http://trib.al/oNqalZ8
Try this for a badly needed reality check:
http://www.medialifemagazine.com/numbers-whos-listening-radio/
This is from a media buying site, not a radio industry site. It presents information of value to the folks who pay for most American radio.
You will note that 18-34's spend an average of 11 hours a week using radio.
Can you quantify that television usage ramps up around the same time of day that radio usage starts to drop off?
Historically, the 7PM drop has been a fact of life for at least 15 years. Maybe longer..
When you look at the AQH chart overall, listening declines pretty rapidly after 7 PM
As some others have mentioned, this has been a fact of life for a long time, especially for country, AC and talk. In fact, that's a lot of what led to syndicated night shows like Delilah and Lia (for country). They cost a lot less and didn't hurt the ratings (at least before PPM).
Truth also is that Delilah was never the goddess she seemed. She rode your ratings more than anything else. Much like Rush Limbaugh 10 or so years earlier, her strategy was to go to the top rated station in her format and try to get on there. It was an easy sell in most cases because of how much cheaper she was over live talent and how the ratings remained level.
In fact, that's a lot of what led to syndicated night shows like Delilah and Lia (for country). They cost a lot less and didn't hurt the ratings.