This is a general question about all commercial radio in the US. How do stations decide how many minutes of adverts to broadcast per clock hour?
My thinking goes like this. If a radio station broadcast no adverts, it would obviously make no money. If a radio station broadcast all adverts and no content, they would get no listeners (assuming people don't tune in just to hear ads!) and make no money. So how do they decide the happy medium in between?
Is there convention on this? Do they decide depending on the amount of competition in a market? So a market with only one AC station might play more adverts, but not so many that people give up and stick a CD on instead. Or do some stations have fewer ad spots so they can charge a premium for them?
Or am I completely on the wrong track here?
My thinking goes like this. If a radio station broadcast no adverts, it would obviously make no money. If a radio station broadcast all adverts and no content, they would get no listeners (assuming people don't tune in just to hear ads!) and make no money. So how do they decide the happy medium in between?
Is there convention on this? Do they decide depending on the amount of competition in a market? So a market with only one AC station might play more adverts, but not so many that people give up and stick a CD on instead. Or do some stations have fewer ad spots so they can charge a premium for them?
Or am I completely on the wrong track here?