Wow, gotta give an A-plus to the tone of THIS thread over the past 24 hours! Intelligent, informed and informative exchange, as opposed to the recent endless rhetoric and bomb-throwing. Great job, guys!
RE: marketing of IBOC. HD boosters would be well-advised to go to school on how NTSC color TV was marketed in the mid-1950s. Like our beloved HD radio, color TV of the era was controversial, prohibitively expensive and trouble-prone (particularly on the receiving end.) It was initially controversial because of two aggressive competitors who didn't like each other, General David Sarnoff of RCA (proponent of NTSC standards in effect to the present day) and CBS honcho Bill Paley, whose famed engineer Peter Goldmark had cobbled a noncompatible semi-mechanical system that only worked on UHF.
When NTSC prevailed, Sarnoff did NOT run promos on NBC that said, "buy color TV! We've got ALL the colors: red, cyan, magenta...and a lot of colors in between the colors, too!!"
No. NO! NBC debuted an attractive, albeit initially limited schedule of prime time color shows, highest-profile of which was Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color, the old "Disneyland" lured away from B&W ABC. Yep: it took a decade, but NBC ultimately cultivated the market for NTSC color with....say it with me....PROGRAMMING. By the mid-1960s NBC had the first all-color prime time network, and economies of scale brought color sets down within reason. This resulted in a doubling of sales for several years in a row.
Promoting "technology" directly to the general public, which has little interest in engineering or technical matters, is doomed to failure. If you want to get listeners to buy new technology the best way - no, the ONLY effective way - is to give them the only real reason they listen, better programming.
Andrew Carnegie said it: "Pioneering don't pay."
Listener #1 might have said it: "Why are you listening to that sucko morning show with the boring DJs and the 300-song repetitive playlist?"
Listener #2 then said: "Because of the sparkling HD digital sound, of course!!"
RE: marketing of IBOC. HD boosters would be well-advised to go to school on how NTSC color TV was marketed in the mid-1950s. Like our beloved HD radio, color TV of the era was controversial, prohibitively expensive and trouble-prone (particularly on the receiving end.) It was initially controversial because of two aggressive competitors who didn't like each other, General David Sarnoff of RCA (proponent of NTSC standards in effect to the present day) and CBS honcho Bill Paley, whose famed engineer Peter Goldmark had cobbled a noncompatible semi-mechanical system that only worked on UHF.
When NTSC prevailed, Sarnoff did NOT run promos on NBC that said, "buy color TV! We've got ALL the colors: red, cyan, magenta...and a lot of colors in between the colors, too!!"
No. NO! NBC debuted an attractive, albeit initially limited schedule of prime time color shows, highest-profile of which was Walt Disney's Wonderful World of Color, the old "Disneyland" lured away from B&W ABC. Yep: it took a decade, but NBC ultimately cultivated the market for NTSC color with....say it with me....PROGRAMMING. By the mid-1960s NBC had the first all-color prime time network, and economies of scale brought color sets down within reason. This resulted in a doubling of sales for several years in a row.
Promoting "technology" directly to the general public, which has little interest in engineering or technical matters, is doomed to failure. If you want to get listeners to buy new technology the best way - no, the ONLY effective way - is to give them the only real reason they listen, better programming.
Andrew Carnegie said it: "Pioneering don't pay."
Listener #1 might have said it: "Why are you listening to that sucko morning show with the boring DJs and the 300-song repetitive playlist?"
Listener #2 then said: "Because of the sparkling HD digital sound, of course!!"