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Talktalk
Guest
Thank you...unfortunatly, I feel a novel coming...or is it a novella? anyhow, it's coming. I might print it and read it as I try to fall asleep tonite.
Talktalk said:Can't help myself. DE keeps stepping in it and I must clarify.
DE, how can you make a claim that PPM is the cause for revenue losses, you have no back up, zero, nothing. Look at the top 10 markets around the country and you will find that revenue is down. That is not conjecture...that is fact
Also, you say Cost Per Points will go down, actually, they go up and planners plan for fewer points in the market. As evidenced by the Boston PPM TV test in 2001. The first Arbitron PPM tests were in Wilmington and they found similar patterns to the Nielsen PPM.
So, once again, you don't understand the revenue side of the business. Have a nice day.
Talktalk said:DE, how can you make a claim that PPM is the cause for revenue losses, you have no back up, zero, nothing. Look at the top 10 markets around the country and you will find that revenue is down. That is not conjecture...that is fact
As evidenced by the Boston PPM TV test in 2001. The first Arbitron PPM tests were in Wilmington and they found similar patterns to the Nielsen PPM.
So, once again, you don't understand the revenue side of the business. Have a nice day.
adguy said:DE is partially correct. What he doesn't want to admit is that radio (terrestrial that is) is eventually heading the way of the newpaper and magazine.
In 15 years the majority of radio listeners will be exclusively IPOD and/or Satellite and terrestrial will have basically terd value.
And DE, that includes your precious Spanish language stations. Yes, even Hispanics will adopt new technologies within 15 years.
As someone who buys radio occasionally, I certainly have put pressure on my reps to lower rates because of the ACTUAL revised listenership. Radio and TV have been getting away with murder for years on inflated audience levels.
Revenues will continue to decline for years to come because of BOTH the PPMs AND the growing inefficiency of the media itself.
Ever wonder why the big owners are getting out now? They are not stupid.
They realized their profits and know it's time to bail before losing money. Instead of laughing at the buyers' stupidity owners are now laughing at the really dumb station buyers paying more than 5 times cash flow for stations.
In fact they're getting the real bellyaches from those paying more than 8 or 10 times cash flow. Personally, I wouldn't pay more than 3-4 times cash flow. The flow won't be there in a few years, but you could probably make a go of it at a lower price paid for a station. That said, unless you're Alice through the looking glass, don't look for rising revenues anytime soon if ever again.
Talktalk said:DE, last week you said Boston was "nearly double digit losses" now you quote a "newsletter" as down 10%.
And even so, all markets are down, so exact results are irrelevant.
Your information is evaluated by you in a vacum, (a little information is a dangerous thing)you have no empirical evidence to offer.
You also come up with new "first" tests in England"...noooooo, actually, they have been tested in Asia, then Europe and Australia...
But, they HAVE been in use here in the US in TV since 2001...and the results (empirical results) are similar to what we are finding in radio results.
Once again, you DID say cost per point would go down when you say they will buy the same points for less money.
That is not what the empirical evidence says, as in tv, point levels will shrink and CPP will go up, resetting the market
DavidEduardo said:In any case, radio is off a lot less than the stock mmarket!
I hope D.E. knows more about radio than he knows about the stock market. Even with the recent downturn, the Dow-Jones Industrial Average is up 7% year to date.
Talktalk said:OK, now it's on...adman, hold tight i will get to your silly statements in a minute.
Once again, you DID say cost per point would go down when you say they will buy the same points for less money. That is not what the empirical evidence says, as in tv, point levels will shrink and CPP will go up, resetting the market
And if you have anymore to argue about, read adman's rediculous statements, and think, he said YOU WERE RIGHT!
longtimelistener said:I hope D.E. knows more about radio than he knows about the stock market. Even with the recent downturn, the Dow-Jones Industrial Average is up 7% year to date.
Talktalk said:And the marathon thread continues, but this is good. It fleshes out the fraud. DE, you have once again flip lopped so many times in the hopes of covering off on your own lack of knowledge that the topic itself has been forgotten. If anyone even cares, go back through the posts and you will find that DE has either altered the topic mid point or completely flipped, one example, then everyone else can look for themselves, when we talk about PPM, Neilsen has been at it longer than Arbitron, the Neilsen tests took place long before the Arbitron tests, get your facts straight.
Ok, another example, your comments about the stock market, I have NO idea what you just said in that last post when challenged on the numbers...and I don't think you do either.
Adguy, just because you could't cut it in radio sales does not give you authority to bash the industry.
As far as the rest of your gibberish, you obviously don't buy radio, not sure if you buy anything but national cable, and that is fine.
But when you read about advertising cuts and attach them to radio in particular, you should document the source, don't worry, DG doesn't either.
And finally, one thing you should know, had you been able to cut it in the industry, you would have found that there are plenty of us in the biz doing just fine.
kissmyradio said:Ad Guy ,Frishberg and DE are cut from the same burlap bag. They define why radio is on the fast decline.
adguy said:KPLEX, love your posts too. Always interesting and entertaining, but as to the DE to the Dan Frishberg comparrison, DE is a real radio professional. Frishberg is the most dangerous radio personality out there. He's a guy that thinks he has the knowledge and experience of a DE, but in reality is just one of those radio hacks scamming any and everyone he comes in contact with and has the authority of running a station and influencing a potential audience. The good thing about that is that he has no idea how to attract an audience, so any influence he might have is over a very few people that even know BizRadio exists.
TheRover said:adguy said:KPLEX, love your posts too. Always interesting and entertaining, but as to the DE to the Dan Frishberg comparrison, DE is a real radio professional. Frishberg is the most dangerous radio personality out there. He's a guy that thinks he has the knowledge and experience of a DE, but in reality is just one of those radio hacks scamming any and everyone he comes in contact with and has the authority of running a station and influencing a potential audience. The good thing about that is that he has no idea how to attract an audience, so any influence he might have is over a very few people that even know BizRadio exists.
I will always take issue with the goal of "attracting an audience" for advertisers as a reason for a radio station to exist. I would prefer the FCC take a stiffer interpretation of what it means to "Serve the Public Interest," in contrast to "Serving the iPublic Interests of Advertisers", when considering the granting and re-newing of these licences to use "the Public's Airwaves". 8)
TheRover said:I will always take issue with the goal of "attracting an audience" for advertisers as a reason for a radio station to exist. I would prefer the FCC take a stiffer interpretation of what it means to "Serve the Public Interest," in contrast to "Serving the iPublic Interests of Advertisers", when considering the granting and re-newing of these licences to use "the Public's Airwaves". 8)
MikeShannon914 said:10...you're putting all thoughts of corporate radio into a tight ball. See the ball. See it move into your left hand.
9...you're taking that ball, and hurling it as hard as you can at the wall. See all the sales numbers, ratings, call letters and old bosses' names fall to the floor.
6...the images in your mind of (choose one: DE, Kplex, AdGuy, TalkTalk) are fading into a dim light, replaced by an image of a radio station with nice bosses, no concern about ratings or sales, and a commitment to public service.
5...you are being asked what songs YOU'D like to play...and someone is wanting your opinion on the direction of the station.
4...you see all of your old bosses filing in the front door, asking for job applications.
3...you get the ratings book and your station is a solid, runaway #1.
2...you get a paycheck that's more than you ever expected, and it actually cashes.
1...you get a pat on the back from management, and told what a great job you're doing.
When I snap my fingers, you will wake up in time for work in the morning, completely refreshed and ready to type nice things on Radio-Info...