Thanks, fourseasons, and I am going to crib from a little1 comment on the thread entitled "The Ticket, ESPN & The Fan"
"And the Ticket gets a bad rap IMHO. They cover sports when there's sports to be covered, but they also realize that water cooler talk is about the [G]ramm[y]s, the Oscars, TV shows, etc...
People may not like the sports/non sports mix they are throwing out there, but it's been damn succesful. They were the top billing station in the market a couple of years back, and IIRC, they're still in the top handful of stations, so SOMEONE (like thousands of listeners) likes what they're doing..."
I'm not in radio, but I do recall years ago when stations (maybe even syndicators) would do call-out surveys and play snippets of music. Would anyone do that kind of call-out research in connection with sports/talk radio? I have no idea. I do know that CBS Television finally caved in and went along with the Google dream of putting snippets of CBS' programming on YouTube. Seems to be working quite well. Type in "David Letterman 2010" on the YouTube browser line, and check out the large number of views.
I think I have read where shows like All in the Family, Cheers, Hill Street Blues, Scrubs, and Dirty Jobs with Mike Rowe struggled to get numbers for awhile. The difference back then was that the programming chiefs either a) decided or b) were very much persuaded audiences would find these programs. They were correct, and on a massive scale. Now...try to imagine the television landscape without them?
Okay, back to radio so I can avoid going to TIO...
My perception has been something like that Field of Dreams quote: "If you build it, they will come." KVIL built it. So did KSCS. So did KPLX. KISS, The Eagle, and much more recently, KLNO and The Ticket. My apologies if I am leaving out your powerhouse favorite from days gone by. The point here is, they didn't cave. They had a plan, they believed in it, everybody up and down the line bought into it, they kept developing it, and the audience eventually showed up in highly enviable numbers
At the end of the day, and I think I have said this elsewhere, the common wisdom these days is: talent and programs no longer currently don't have the luxury of developing while the audience finds them. Shorter and shorter PPM trends seem to rapidly seal the fate of a lot of radio on-air people. And that's really a shame, because some of them just needed time for their audience to discover them. In the good old days, didn't it take 3 or more 'books' to show a trend, whether it was upward, downward, or merely maintaining your audience share?
Can the landscape improve? Absolutely. You need a station owner who doesn't have enormous financial pressure to pay that massive monthly nut, because he didn't overpay for a radio station/group. Further, you need an experienced GM who knows his market and can delegate all the proper authority to his GSM and his PD. Even if your AE's are selling it well, you still need.....patience. And a Chinese Wall between sales and the on-air product.
My .02 Your results may differ.