cm454 said:Most people I know READ the newspapers info ONLINE.
At last week's NAB convention in Las Vegas, "The Tipping Point"/"Blink"/"Outliers" author Malcom Gladwell spoke, and asked, provocatively:
“What if everything had started online…then paper came along? You don’t need to be online, it’s portable, you can tear-something-out-of-it, you can write on it...”
For all its challenges, radio should ask itself the same question: What if AM/FM broadcasting were just now being introduced? It’s FREE! There’s nothing to download or synch-up, the station does all the work. To use a couple buzzwords en vogue, radio is “mobile” and “wireless.”
One of my clients -- head of a station group -- recently asked the programmers and on-air people we rounded up: "Every radio station has a web site. Imagine A WEB SITE having A RADIO STATION? We do!"
Regardless of platform, media that will survive-and-thrive are those that are nimble, and accommodate the way busy people graze for information and entertainment content.
For GENERATIONS, radio and the newspaper have been arch enemies.
Lately, strange economic times make for strange bedfellows; with radio/newspaper synergies proving useful here and there.
For examples, notes I'm sending client stations, send an Email (blank if you want) to [email protected].
Moments later the robot will point you at a download. No virus, no spam.
The Ultimate Warrior said:Talk radio is opinion, not news.
You betcha! It's A SHOW.
"News/Talk" radio can be both. The most-successful stations are, effectively, "facts" from 00-05, then "feelings" [callers' take on a topic culled from one of those facts-in-the-newscast] from 05-00.
The most successful hosts are those who seem to...
1. Reckon what-in-that-top-of-hour-newscast is uber-relevant to the target listener (i.e., flu is REAL interesting to the parents-of-school-age-children that a Talk station's advertisers want to reach).
2. Quickly pose the topic, state-the-host's-take, invite callers. "Quickly," because many listeners may graze-in for top-of-hour news, then wander-back to tunes on FM.
3. Sound busy. Keep it moving. Lots of calls brings lots of perspective, and makes a show sound popular. And I'm always impressed when the host re-sets often, so folks-who-JUST-tuned-in instantly "get it."
HC
www.HollandCooke.com