AudioLoveMagic said:
Aren't I supposed to do what I do and if people latch on they do, if not, accept it and keep going?
I've read the books about serving a specific audience. Is this what you're referring to?
If you are a genius at knowing what people will latch on, then yes.
Think of the restaurant business. You decide to go to some town that you find attractive as a place to live, to be, to hang out, and you open a restaurant. You decide to cook "what I do" and open the doors. After a few months your business is pretty, well.... pretty dead.
I come to the same town. I visit the various restaurants to see what they have on the menu. I eat slowly so there is some turnover and traffic while I am eating. I pay close attention to what people are ordering. I listen to what they have to say about the food. Somehow I get some local people aside and I do a survey: What are you looking for when you eat out? What do you not find locally? I visit some nearby towns or nearby neighborhoods if you are in a city. What are people eating there? Pretty soon I have a feel for what people will order from a menu and what they will NOT order a second time!
I find some people who cook who can teach me how to cook the foods I've never worked with before.
NOW! I am ready to sit down and decide which of the marketable foods I find to be fun to work with. Which menu can I be proud of. What menu can I have the will result in me waking up each day excited that I am going to love being the chef today... and I am confident people are going to enjoy being "foodies" over.
If you go to Maine and start serving biscuits 'n gravy along with grits, you may not have a thriving business. If you go to Alabama and start serving Boston Clam Chowder and Rack of Lamb, you may not be putting much into your retirement fund over the next five years.
Among the right people, "doin watc'cha do" may be a winner. Or you may fall on your face.
Does that add anything to what the previous poster said?
P.S. Back when towns had a lot of local mom and pop restaurants, my example made sense. Today in a town that only has McDonalds, Burger King and Pizza Hut, watching what others order is NOT instructive. They really have no choices.
Listening to radio today and looking at audience studies may not be instructive. It only tells you what people order when the menu is limited.
We're back to the question: Are you a genius? I hope so.