• Get involved.
    We want your input!
    Apply for Membership and join the conversations about everything related to broadcasting.

    After we receive your registration, a moderator will review it. After your registration is approved, you will be permitted to post.
    If you use a disposable or false email address, your registration will be rejected.

    After your membership is approved, please take a minute to tell us a little bit about yourself.
    https://www.radiodiscussions.com/forums/introduce-yourself.1088/

    Thanks in advance and have fun!
    RadioDiscussions Administrators

Family Stations Will Sell 94.7FM WFME Newark

WNTIRadio said:
That's the best idea I've heard of so far... 94.5/94.7 covering most of the state with a NJ based format. Of course, can it bill well? NJ-101.5 bills well by itself, but can the boost from an almost "full state" signal compensate for the purchase price? The populations of Bergen, Passaic and Union counties alone add up to roughly 2 million people, which would be market 23-ish if it weren't in the shadow of NYC. The market is there for a station to cater to their issues. We made money serving Bergen county with news/traffic and music at Jukebox Radio, and that was with a 35 watt translator.

It all remains to be seen.... right now, a sale hasn't been announced. Or a price, or potential buyers.
The problem is New Jersey is a bunch of communities, all different, wrapped up in the 6th smallest state.

Targeting North Jersey?

Where?

Sussex, by the Delaware Water Gap is about as foreign as Canada to those in Monmouth/Ocean.
Then you have Pinebarrens, and don't forget about Cumberland County, most everybody else does.

When someone gets into my cab, here in Sa-ra-so-ta!, I'll ask them if they are a "201" or a "609", meaning, is their influence Philly (609), or New York (201)?

Targeting New York is much easier. The population is more focused toward one City area.

No?

Ask anybody who the Mayor of their town, they can't tell you. But they know Bloomberg in New York.

New York is the low hanging fruit in this case.

...Unless your name is Bob McAllan.

Jeff in Sa-ra-so-ta!
 
Granted Sussex is the boonies of NJ. I wasn't even thinking of Sussex. But, there are statewide issues and more localized issues in both parts of the state. How's about a local newscast that splits off at the top and bottom of the hour for "NJ News North" and "NJ News South". Same deal with traffic and weather. Hell, you could do that for spots too. Then keep the programming wrapped around them the same.

Since NJ 101.5 gets a .9 with a cume of 580k, beating "FM News" with about 1/8th the signal, maybe it's time to reach for some of the fruit a little higher on the tree.
 
Ask anybody who the Mayor of their town, they can't tell you. But they know Bloomberg in New York.

You answered your own question, the reason they know Bloomberg and NOT their own mayor is because they no longer have much in the way of state focused media or news coverage. Exceptions are NJ-101.5 where you can get it, News-12 on "certain" cable systems, and NJTV, public TV for NJ.

We now have a governor, and legislature that make for lots of juicy news copy, and interest. There are plenty of state issues to talk about, and there are millions of New Jersey people who DO NOT cross the river to NY or Philly to go to work. They live all of their lives in Jersey, go to school in Jersey, work in Jersey, play in Jersey, and pay taxes in Jersey. The would be attracted to media that effects them, and fires in Queens, or a political scandal on Long Island or in Westchester do not.

The problem is that major electronic media intended for and licensed to NJ has moved across the rivers and pays most of their attention there. There is a real need for better NJ news coverage, and a sense of state community, and that presents an opportunity to those who can figure a way to make it happen. In Central Jersey, NJ-101.5 has. The same kind of approach could work in North Jersey. New Jersey people do have a lot in common, and are different from New Yorker City types, especially in the NJ suburbs North and South. There was more Jersey targeted radio in the AM days, and there are now several million people living in North Jersey who can only get two commercial FM stations transmitting from North Jersey, WDHA and WFME. You have to wonder how many markets in America that are that large have little real local news and information coverage? Probably, none.

---------

We made money serving Bergen county with news/traffic and music at Jukebox Radio, and that was with a 35 watt translator.

That 35-watt translator sure got out from that Ft. Lee apartment house in the shadow of the GW bridge. I used to catch it every morning on I-78 in Summit, and I had a friend on Manhattan's Upper West Side who listened all the time. I knew "Jerry" the Jukebox Radio owner long before he started the station, we worked at two major stations together, and somehow he would always find a way to make things work, and to make money. He did have a loyal following in Bergen County, and served the community well. He really did care about his Jukebox product. The two advantages he had with that station were "no mortgage" on the license, and the lowest transmitter power bill per listener in radio. That would not be the case with anybody else trying to serve the North Jersey audience. By the way, Bergen County has 905,000 residents, many very wealthy and desired by advertisers, and that 35-watt signal reached them all, and many more. Too bad he couldn't keep the scheme working, but you have to give him credit for making it work for as long as it did.
 
badjef said:
Targeting North Jersey?

Where?

Sussex, by the Delaware Water Gap is about as foreign as Canada to those in Monmouth/Ocean.
Then you have Pinebarrens, and don't forget about Cumberland County, most everybody else does.

The Pine Barrens and Cumberland county are irrelevant in this case since they are served by the Philly stations, so I don't even know why they would come up in discussion. Sussex may seem foreign to some, but don't forget a lot of people commute into NYC and other parts of north Jersey from Sussex county, so it's really not as "out there" as it may seem. Even within NYC, Brooklyn is foreign to someone in the Bronx, and the Bronx is certainly foreign to many people in Staten Island. NJ is much more homogenous than the 5 boros are to each other.
 
Everything in New York City is in walking or subway distance. An advertiser in the Bronx will have Brooklyn customers.

Someone hearing a Pine Belt Chevy commercial is not going to travel from Bergen County, let alone come up from Cape May.

A signal that travels the state will be irrelevent most of the listeners when it comes to sales.

The New Yorkers have a similar problem. Case in point:
Years ago, my grandfather and I were watching News 4 from his home in Toms River and a kill joy, er, K-Joy spot, aired. I said to my grandfather, we can't pick up that station from here. He stated, they shouldn't be running the commercial if we can't hear the station. I said to him, it isn't for us, it is for the Long Island viewers who can receive the station.

He was a typical viewer.

I was driving in Atlantic City, listening at that time to "Hit 106". There was nothing for a listener to care about in Atlantic City and plenty of other similarly sounding stations. The station was just appealing to the Monmouth/Ocean market with a monster local signal in Atlantic City. They have since gone country with the signal, of course.

The reason, like it or not, New Jersey is a bedroom community for New York and Philly. The concentration of radio and tv signals exacerbates the problem. "All roads lead to London."

No doubt there is some nice money made in New Jersey, in itself, a major market had it not been so close to New York or Phily, but reality is the pie is big, but smaller pieces, getting smaller. The easy money is what whoever buys 94.7 or 107.5, will be looking for, and that is in New York City.

Jeff in Sa-ra-so-ta!
 
So maybe that "New Jersey 94" idea I had isn't so farfetched after all. If Townsquare can get 94.7, they can simulcast NJ 101.5 on it. When 94.5 eventually goes for sale, they can purchase that too. Then swap formats on 101.5 and 94.5 to launch New Jersey 94. 94.5 has a better signal in south Jersey than 101.5 since its transmitter is 15 miles south of 101.5, plus it makes it easier for listeners to switch between the two frequencies (however, Townsquare shouldn't shoot itself in the foot by downgrading 94.7 and 94.5 to HD and losing the central NJ listeners because of HD interference). PST's CHR format is billing well, and it should stay.

As for advertising and traffic reports, they could split the simulcast for that.
 
Nick said:
So maybe that "New Jersey 94" idea I had isn't so farfetched after all. If Townsquare can get 94.7, they can simulcast NJ 101.5 on it. When 94.5 eventually goes for sale, they can purchase that too. Then swap formats on 101.5 and 94.5 to launch New Jersey 94. 94.5 has a better signal in south Jersey than 101.5 since its transmitter is 15 miles south of 101.5, plus it makes it easier for listeners to switch between the two frequencies (however, Townsquare shouldn't shoot itself in the foot by downgrading 94.7 and 94.5 to HD and losing the central NJ listeners because of HD interference). PST's CHR format is billing well, and it should stay.

As for advertising and traffic reports, they could split the simulcast for that.
I never said it wouldn't work, in fact, Bob McAllan proved the contrarian method DOES work as evidenced by 101.5. Heck, he didn't even get rid of those obnoxious and irrelevent call letters.

Normally, I wouldn't recommend such an overlap as 101.5 and 94.7, but stations are such short spaced in that area, it might help penetration and selectivity issues with a nice warm electric blanket.

Jeff in Sa-ra-so-ta!
 
And let's not forget you want the most signal to go where there is the most population, and that is in the northeast section of the state.

An advertiser in the Bronx will have Brooklyn customers.

Really? Other than Yankee Stadium, I don't know of any Brooklynites traveling to the Bronx for any reason. Maybe to send their kids to college at Fordham.

However, someone from Bergen county would drive to Morristown, or someone from 45 minutes south of there, if there is a good deal to be had on a car.

Let's also not forget that if you're pulling decent numbers across the state, and hitting those desirable zip codes in Bergen, Morris, Hunterdon, Princeton area... the money belts, that agency spots will follow.

To clarify, I meant the NW corner of Sussex as "the boonies". Southern Sussex has many commuters to the NYC area (Sparta, Lake Hopatcong etc.). I'll grant you that there is a big difference between north and south, but not so with east/west anymore. I know plenty of people from Warren county, where I reside, that work in and around NYC.

I've lived in NJ for my whole life, and know that this state would welcome its "own" station that provides news and information, as well as entertainment to the audience. We did it at Jukebox. It had a cume of 125k in Bergen/Hudson/Union counties. Not too bad for a 35 watt translator. Gerry did make it work, and it's a shame the people at WVNJ blamed him and the translator for their failure of the same format on a limited signal AM on 1160. Gerry is long gone, 103.1 is religious now and WVNJ has gone the route of paid programming. Guess it wasn't 103.1 after all.

WGHT in north Jersey does a fine job at the local thing, but there's only so much you can do as a 1kW daytimer.

Put 94.5/94.7 as NJ-94, and move PST (again) to 101.5.
 
Let's not forget that when it comes to advertising efficiency, many North Jersey advertisers who want to reach their local customers with radio will probably have to pay to reach listeners on Long Island, or in NYC who would never buy their product.

A North Jersey targeted station might offer them that efficiency in ad spending.

At the same time, suburban New Jersey listeners do have a lot of lifestyle, news and political interests in common North and South, and a simulcast of Jersey centric programming could appeal to a lot of them.

Thanks to the PPM system, each local transmitter can be easily rated on its own, and like any other network, it would be easy to offer advertisers local spots, or offer statewide full network ad coverage.

New Jersey now has almost nine-million people, that is a big, and in some areas a very attractive and wealthy, market all by itself and it really doesn't have efficient statewide electronic media, other than the internet, which can be zip code targeted.

The FCC allocators saw the economic and social need when they assigned FM frequencies to North Jersey, but the economic and social realities of the bigger New York market next door have lured those potential New Jersey centric services away.
 
radioguy39nj said:
WNTIRadio said:
Put 94.5/94.7 as NJ-94, and move PST (again) to 101.5.

In Ocean County, I don't get 94.5, 94.7 isn't great and 101.5 isn't city grade. New Jersey 94 would severely lack coverage in Ocean County. :)

Townsquare already owns 94.3 The Point, and WIBG 94.3 can be bought for cheap. 94.7 up north, 94.5 central Jersey, 94.3 down the shore, this is New Jersey 94!

And I just imagined a jingle for 101.5 PST
 
radioguy39nj said:
WNTIRadio said:
Put 94.5/94.7 as NJ-94, and move PST (again) to 101.5.

In Ocean County, I don't get 94.5, 94.7 isn't great and 101.5 isn't city grade. New Jersey 94 would severely lack coverage in Ocean County. :)
You don't pick up 94.5 where you are because of WJLK.

Jeff in Sa-ra-so-ta!
 
badjef said:
radioguy39nj said:
WNTIRadio said:
Put 94.5/94.7 as NJ-94, and move PST (again) to 101.5.

In Ocean County, I don't get 94.5, 94.7 isn't great and 101.5 isn't city grade. New Jersey 94 would severely lack coverage in Ocean County. :)
You don't pick up 94.5 where you are because of WJLK.

Jeff in Sa-ra-so-ta!


Correct! To add to it, I'm on 'JLK's fringe. Go south of 82 on the GSP and it fades quickly. I doubt Townsquare is going to move NJ 101.5 anywhere, nor do I think they'll be a contender for 94.7.

That said, what major commercial operator would be interested in 94.7 if it can't be moved to a Manhattan location. :)
 
radioguy39nj said:
badjef said:
radioguy39nj said:
WNTIRadio said:
Put 94.5/94.7 as NJ-94, and move PST (again) to 101.5.

In Ocean County, I don't get 94.5, 94.7 isn't great and 101.5 isn't city grade. New Jersey 94 would severely lack coverage in Ocean County. :)
You don't pick up 94.5 where you are because of WJLK.

Jeff in Sa-ra-so-ta!


Correct! To add to it, I'm on 'JLK's fringe. Go south of 82 on the GSP and it fades quickly.
WJLK had four different signals in the 80's.
The AM and FM started 1980 on top at Bangs Ave.
They tried to move the AM first and upgrade from 1kw days/250w nights to 2.5kw days and 1kw nights. When proofs wouldn't come out right on the new pattern they found they were off by four feet with one of the antennas at the new location in Tinton Falls. OOps!Then they moved the FM to one of the new towers at the 300 foot level. 1984, came with a 28 foot height increase due to the FCC change to 100 meters from 300 feet.
In 1985, Press saw what the increase in signal that was achieved up the street with 107.1 in downtown Long Branch when they built a new higher antenna, 450ft., and said, "I want that, too."
So, in 1988, Press took 94.3 to 450 ft, as well. The difference was an immediate improvement. Not only with 94.3, but also with 94.1 and 94.5. As they raised the height, of course, came a
reduction in power. Bob McAllan, still not happy with that, petitioned the FCC to raise the Class A's to 6kw. Not a secret, why? He could get 3kw back.

Instead, sold 94.3 and bought 101.5 soon afterward. They had the cash after flipping Channel 65 to do all of this.
...must be nice.

Jeff in Sa-ra-so-ta!
 
badjef said:
WJLK had four different signals in the 80's.
The AM and FM started 1980 on top at Bangs Ave.
They tried to move the AM first and upgrade from 1kw days/250w nights to 2.5kw days and 1kw nights. When proofs wouldn't come out right on the new pattern they found they were off by four feet with one of the antennas at the new location in Tinton Falls. OOps!Then they moved the FM to one of the new towers at the 300 foot level. 1984, came with a 28 foot height increase due to the FCC change to 100 meters from 300 feet.
In 1985, Press saw what the increase in signal that was achieved up the street with 107.1 in downtown Long Branch when they built a new higher antenna, 450ft., and said, "I want that, too."
So, in 1988, Press took 94.3 to 450 ft, as well. The difference was an immediate improvement. Not only with 94.3, but also with 94.1 and 94.5. As they raised the height, of course, came a
reduction in power. Bob McAllan, still not happy with that, petitioned the FCC to raise the Class A's to 6kw. Not a secret, why? He could get 3kw back.

Jeff in Sa-ra-so-ta!

And now with WIBG operating on 94.3 with 6,000 watts from Upper Township, WIP-FM from Philly blasting IBOC "HD Radio" and 94.5 WPST from Trenton with 50,000 watts there are many parts of Ocean County where WJLK-FM is totally unlistenable. Funny how things work out sometimes, isn't it?

Along Rt. 72 in Barnegat, Stafford and Ship Bottom 94.3 is essentially a 50/50 mix of WJLK and WIBG while 94.5 WPST is crystal clear. Along Rt. 539 from Barnegat to New Egypt 94.3 is nothing but IBOC noise from WIP-FM more than 75% of the time, once again WPST is crystal clear.

Back to the topic of 94.7, it is a total non-factor in Ocean County.

Currently 94.7 WFME is...
56 miles from the population center of Toms River (population 91,000)
51 miles from the population center of Brick (population 75,000)
75 miles from the population center of Stafford (population 26,000)
82 miles from the population center of Little Egg Harbor (population 20,000)

Moving to the Empire State Building will make it one to two miles closer at best and it will still be a non-factor.
 
TimeIsTight said:
Let's not forget that when it comes to advertising efficiency, many North Jersey advertisers who want to reach their local customers with radio will probably have to pay to reach listeners on Long Island, or in NYC who would never buy their product.

Radio is not appropriate for smaller local retailers in as dense a metro as NY is. They use local cable, various web options, etc. Even if you think of the Jersey only coverage, nobody is going to drive from the north end of the useful signal to the south end for a single shoe store or even a car or a sofa.

The advertisers that can afford radio are going to be the brands sold everywhere and the multi location retail outlets, not the pizza place at one location.

Radio is not bought by state or region, it is bought by market. There is no NE NJ market for ad buys. There is a New York MSA market.

At the same time, suburban New Jersey listeners do have a lot of lifestyle, news and political interests in common North and South, and a simulcast of Jersey centric programming could appeal to a lot of them.

But advertisers big enough to buy across a state are agency accounts, and they buy individual markets. There is no advertiser demand for a Jersey station per se.... there is a demand for Philly market coverage, for NYC market coverage, and, to a much lesser extent for Trenton coverage, Atlantic City coverage and even, a little, for the embedded market coverage.

Thanks to the PPM system, each local transmitter can be easily rated on its own, and like any other network, it would be easy to offer advertisers local spots, or offer statewide full network ad coverage.

That could be done in the diary, too. Arbitron even has procedures for stations with overlapping coverage.

But... where is the need? Didn't 101.5 simulcast in Atlantic City, only to abandon that effort when the sales advantage was not there? Or am I thinking of another station...

New Jersey now has almost nine-million people, that is a big, and in some areas a very attractive and wealthy, market all by itself and it really doesn't have efficient statewide electronic media, other than the internet, which can be zip code targeted.

Other than Puerto Rico, which is a single market that requires multiple signals to cover, I can't think of any other US state or Commonwealth that has statewide coverage other than some now-declining state networks. Does Florida have statewide coverage? Or Maine? Or California?

In fact, thinking of California, the majority of the big AM and FM stations in LA have impressive numbers in the Riverside market... but they can't make any extra money off that because advertisers don't combine the two radio markets and won't pay extra for that coverage.

The FCC allocators saw the economic and social need when they assigned FM frequencies to North Jersey, but the economic and social realities of the bigger New York market next door have lured those potential New Jersey centric services away.

Allocations were made a long time ago, with engineering being the principal factor and then population. Economic need was hardly a factor, and "social" need was only a consideration in trying to insure local service. But in a big metro, "local" means "market" and not every political jurisdiction needs a voice or has one, nor is there much interest in such information as opposed to the focus of, let's say, WINS or WCBS.
 
JerseyShor said:
Currently 94.7 WFME is...
56 miles from the population center of Toms River (population 91,000)
51 miles from the population center of Brick (population 75,000)
75 miles from the population center of Stafford (population 26,000)
82 miles from the population center of Little Egg Harbor (population 20,000)

Moving to the Empire State Building will make it one to two miles closer at best and it will still be a non-factor.

Moving Z-100 from West Orange to Empire, allowed WJRZ to move their tower from Manahawkin to Forked River, approx. 9 miles north. I can only assume the mileages for towns would be 9 miles more than the figures you present.

The exact 50 mile mark from Empire is on Route 35 where the split is through Mantoloking. To get there, the signal travels through Brooklyn and jumps over Eastpoint in the Atlantic Highlands.

Now you know why that 1400 ft of Empire's antenna is so important.

Jeff in Sa-ra-so-ta!
 
DavidEduardo said:
But... where is the need? Didn't 101.5 simulcast in Atlantic City, only to abandon that effort when the sales advantage was not there? Or am I thinking of another station...
You may be thinking of the 97.7 South Jersey signal for retransmission of 101.5.
Other than Puerto Rico, which is a single market that requires multiple signals to cover, I can't think of any other US state or Commonwealth that has statewide coverage other than some now-declining state networks. Does Florida have statewide coverage? Or Maine? Or California?
There are still stations, here in Florida with monster signals, some just increased to even stronger, but there is no network of signals looking to blanket the state as has been suggested. There was a TIS at 1680 with a network of stations, but it is gone, now.

The name "WFLA" is used in Tallahassee, Orlando, and Tampa, but those are individual stations, targeting their respective markets.

Heck, you're lucky if a Tampa station even cares about anybody South of Tampa Bay, anymore.

Jeff in Sa-ra-so-ta!
 
badjef said:
DavidEduardo said:
Other than Puerto Rico, which is a single market that requires multiple signals to cover, I can't think of any other US state or Commonwealth that has statewide coverage other than some now-declining state networks. Does Florida have statewide coverage? Or Maine? Or California?
The name "WFLA" is used in Tallahassee, Orlando, and Tampa, but those are individual stations, targeting their respective markets.

WFLA also has an outpost in Panama City. Don't the stations all carry the same syndicated programming, only breaking for local commercials?

The only statewide commercial network I'm aware of is Supertalk Mississippi, which is a half dozen or so FM stations and one part time AM on the coast. The individual stations have unique commercials and a few breakaway programs that are unique to that one station, but otherwise Jackson local talent and syndicated programming are the same.

Of course there are many statewide networks of public radio stations. Mississippi again has one of the most comprehensive, all running HD and having big coverage areas. I think they may also break away individual repeaters occasionally for specialty programs local to each unique region. Alabama has APR but it only covers about half the state; another quarter is served by Troy State Public Radio from three affiliates.

I think if New Jersey has no state identity because of Philly and NYC's influences, it's because no one's tried to really forge that identity in talk/news radio. But there seems to be a good reason no one's done that, thanks to Philly and NYC again.
 
Radio is not appropriate for smaller local retailers in as dense a metro as NY is. They use local cable, various web options, etc. Even if you think of the Jersey only coverage, nobody is going to drive from the north end of the useful signal to the south end for a single shoe store or even a car or a sofa.

Agreed, but we are not taking about small local shops. There are plenty of large businesses in New Jersey that buy advertising and don't do a dimes worth of business in New York City or Philadelphia. Among them are banks, utilities, and some chain retailers. There are a number of large drive-in convenience store chains that have no place in urban areas, but a lot of outlets scattered throughout the suburban areas of NJ. They do advertise in local NJ radio markets where the can, but in areas where they can't reach the target audience efficiently with radio they channel their available dollars into local print and outdoor media instead. A NJ oriented station could pick up a lot of the ad dollars in those now inefficient geographical areas.

And then there are also NJ businesses that bite the bullet and pay to reach mostly listeners in NYC and Long Island who will never be their customers, but hope it is still worth paying NYC radio stations for the fraction of their audience in the advertisers business area, among them are the NJ car dealers who buy spots on NYC radio.

But advertisers big enough to buy across a state are agency accounts, and they buy individual markets. There is no advertiser demand for a Jersey station per se.... there is a demand for Philly market coverage, for NYC market coverage, and, to a much lesser extent for Trenton coverage, Atlantic City coverage and even, a little, for the embedded market coverage.

Radio is not bought by state or region, it is bought by market. There is no NE NJ market for ad buys. There is a New York MSA market.

Hopefully, ad agencies are sophisticated enough to understand market segmentation, and just as ad buys are made by age, or ethnicity, with computers it is just as easy to make buys based on "geographical" area within a market. A station that tries to do this may have to do the number crunching and selling of the concept but it is certainly doable. It would just be the same kind of market differentiation now done in print and on the Internet. Ad agencies making big print buys certainly have known forever the reasons for wanting to place ads in the "Newark Star Ledger," as opposed to the New York Daily News. Or in "New Jersey Monthly" magazine as opposed to New York Magazine. They could be convinced to make radio buys based on the same kinds of reasons.

While there currently is no NE New Jersey market for radio ad buys, that doesn't mean that there shouldn't be. Segmenting a market by political geography is no different from segmenting a market by ethnic or age group or any other category.

Over the years local radio stations have convinced Arbitron to provide data for local radio markets within the larger NYC market. Morristown, Monmouth-Ocean, Union-Middlesex-Somerset and Sussex are examples. The same could be done for NE New Jersey.

That could be done in the diary, too. Arbitron even has procedures for stations with overlapping coverage.

Although it could be done with diaries, PPM offers more certainty, less chance of confusion, and takes pressure off the broadcaster trying to make sure listeners get their diary entries correct. It's just a more workable system now than it has been in the past.

But... where is the need? Didn't 101.5 simulcast in Atlantic City, only to abandon that effort when the sales advantage was not there?

Yes, and NJ-101.5 did draw a South Jersey audience with that relay, but I don't think they bothered to network and sell the spots separately based on location. Just like North Jersey car dealers not wanting to pay for listeners on Long Island, they really don't want to pay to reach listeners in Atlantic City either.

As far as "the need" goes, from a listener perspective more news and information coverage targeted at New Jersey would certainly be attractive. You have to remember that NJ has no over-the-air commercial TV news coverage specifically targeted at the state, and in its mostly densely populated areas it doesn't have any specifically targeted radio coverage either. That makes it a unique situation in this country and therefore it offers opportunities for a unique fix. Maine, or California, nor any other state, don't need the same kind of fix because they have plenty of big in-state media to provide state and local news coverage. For whatever reason NJ was assigned radio and TV frequencies to provide that state and local coverage, but they have almost all moved across the rivers.

The need from an advertising perspective is for better potential customer targeting, more efficiency and less waste of ad dollars spent.

. But in a big metro, "local" means "market" and not every political jurisdiction needs a voice or has one, nor is there much interest in such information as opposed to the focus of, let's say, WINS or WCBS.
Posted on: Yesterday at 05:57:37 PM

You have to remember that WINS trends to targeting NYC listeners, and WCBS trends to targeting listeners in the suburbs.

As far as "political need" goes, citizens need to be fully informed about what is going on in their state or locality, unfortunately on New York or Philly media New Jersey news usually comes in second place or worse. That has been a citizen complaint in this market for decades.

New Jersey also has many demographic, ethnic and economic differences from NYC.

Subway riders buy far fewer new cars than suburbanites, apartment dwellers buy no swimming pools, but suburban homeowners do.

Some 40% of NYC residents were born in another country, but only 20% of New Jersey residents were.

Some 33% of New York City's population is described by the census as "non-Hispanic White" while in New Jersey that same description fits almost 60% and is much closer to the national average.

Only 33% of NYC residents own their own homes, while 66% of NJ residents do.

The median income in NYC is $50,000 and in NJ it is $70,000.

And the list could go on and on.

These kinds of differences are, and should be, of great importance to marketers and advertising buyers and they should have at least as much impact on the media buyers media choices as ethnicity or age group.

A station specifically targeted and delivering New Jersey residents could deliver potential customers with more average dollars to spend, and who are more likely to buy specific products, as well as provide efficiency to those advertisers who don't do business outside the state.
 
Status
This thread has been closed due to inactivity. You can create a new thread to discuss this topic.


Back
Top Bottom