What I understand is that average to weak local shows can't compete with Bobby Bones, Seacrest and Charlemagne. Those "big" shows have access to artists and contacts for content that the station in Wichita or Cleveland does not.
That access problem is getting worse. You often talk about how advertisers want a one-stop for buying. That also applies to publicists and record labels who arrange guest interviews for radio stations. The record labels are looking at the research. They see the PUM figures dropping, and they don't see the value of having their artists doing interviews with local radio stations. The interviews become tedious for the artists, and don't generate the viral social media action they get from Charlemagne. If a radio station can't demonstrate how an interview multiplied impressions, they probably won't get those big name interviews anymore.
That satisfies Jacob's concerns but does him out of all but, maybe, one job.
People have to remember what Jacobs does. The more people in local radio, the more potential clients. He knows where his bread is buttered. All of the independent consultants are doing everything they can to hold the line on staffing.