Z
ZAX Double J
Guest
On an engineering board I'm on the duscussion came up about the constant liners in between songs came up and how some disliked them. I for one dislike using them after every freakin song. Someone posted the following as a response that I thought all here ought to read. The end results is the way a station SHOULD be programmed. Feel free to comment. ;D
Here in Nowhereville, We have conducted a study on how to "properly" program a radio station. We then made a written list of unbreakable rules:
1. The playlist may contain no fewer than 150 nor more than 400 titles,
2. The entire playlist must contain only those titles that test as safe.
3. The entire hour's commercial inventory must be lumped into two six minute clumps to be played strictly at 16 and 45 past.
4. There must be a liner/sweeper/jingle between each title played in a music sweep
5. News/weather reports must be packaged in 60 second bullet form.
6. Requests are to be ignored and the carefully researched playlist be strictlly adhered to.
7. Birthdays, Anniversaries etc are of no interest to anyone other than those celebrating the Birthday/Anniversary etc and should not be used to clutter the airwaves.
Then after having studied these rules carefully we threw them all away and did the following:
1. The playlist contains more than 2,000 titles. Obviously some rotate more heavily than others.
2. We have no access to that expensive research so an unofficial committee has been established consisting of station personnel, callers, anyone we happen to bump into in town etc.
3. We do actually maintain regularly scheduled spot set times so long as the total length doesn't exceed 3 minutes (This rule is extremely variable-sometimes the breaks are shorter. Sometimes longer) and competitors are not run in the same set.
4. Liners are to be used sparingly as we don't subscribe to a ratings service and it just sounds better to either open the mic and throw the calls in along with the current weather or something going on in town and we are certinaly not bashful about letting two songs play back to back with nothing in between.
5. We blew this one out bigtime! We have regularly scheduled longform (Hour) newscasts in the morning noon and at 5.
6. There's a regularly scheduled two hour block just for requests by phone, email fax and sometimes listeners traveleing through will stop by and make a request in person. These are part of the committee in broken rule 2.
7. Our coverage area is primarily small towns so the "degree of Separation" is about a magnitude 3. The average listener who hears said birthday will know someone who know the Birthday-ee.
The end result of the broken rules has been: Ad sales are up, the rates went up with'em. Although we don't subscribe to a ratings service, the freebie 12 plus (not our demo) numbers you see online have increased. We follow our own beat and do anything we can think of to make the broadcasts interesting, right down to taking guesses last August during a stifling heatwave as to how long it would take to fry an egg in the parking lot with a small prize for the closest guess. This won't fly for every market but it sure is working here.