allenv said:
There would be no wasting money on a consultant for me.The listeners and the
intelligence of my employees to make good in house decisions would be my consultant.Take that money saved and put it into employee salaries,station promotions,equipment etc....Also no more than 15 minutes per hour of spots.At 15 minutes we are sold out.Hopefully the client's message would not get lost in too much clutter.My station would be manned 24/7 with live people.The music never stops except at spot breaks and I would make sure the jock had a good long intro to rap over and would always use a music bed when talking into a break.My station would also segue two songs back to back a couple of times an hour.Liners and jingles are great but you don't need them after every song.Clutter is clutter and to me a jingle or liner after every song is clutter.
Nothing wrong with a dry pre recorded liner over the intro of a song.I don't hear that much anymore.A mention of the weather in some form or fashion every 15 minutes,and either back or front sell every song that is played.Every phone call would be recorded for requests,use in promo's etc...no canned "listener" testimonials.. I hate those with a passion.I still think time checks are important too.I would have jocks cross promo each other at least twice an hour and also do quick local PSA's with the station's phone number if a listener wanted more info.I'm not a huge fan of remotes except for the fact it puts some extra money in the jock's pocket.Let's face it most of the time all we are doing is feeding the employees of the business and the car load of folks looking for a freebie.Radio is radio but some stations are simply a catering service to feed client employees.If you want food at your remote fine.. pay the station extra and we'll come with a spread but again for some reason businesses expect a station to provide lunch for the employees.A remote is supposed to help a business sell product but 99.9% of the time Joe Freeloader takes your pizza and T-shirt with no intention of buying anything.
I know guys that own more radio station tee shirts than I do from remotes.My point is are we really helping the client by having a remote just for the sake of having a remote??? I don't advocate eliminating remotes all together but there has got to be a better way to really serve the client.And last there would be at least a 48 hour turnover with music.If a song plays Monday the earliest you will hear it again will be Wednesday and to me that's pushing it....Again all this is just my humble opinion and most of these ideas people in the "know" with radio today
think I'm out of my mind..
Allen
Allen, if I may, time to wake up from your radio dream.
There are bad and good consultants.
I would suggest, pick a good one, otherwise, you run the risk of conducting your business in a vacuum.
15 minutes of commercials per hour IS alot of clutter.
You obviously have
the best sales force in your market, thus the 24/7 staff.
The jock has a good long intro to talk about stuff (more clutter) that nobody cares about.
Just my programming opinion, when I hear a music bed being played under a jock,
this signals they are about to say nothing important.
Front and back selling every song = more clutter.
Constant time checks in 2008 are no longer important.
Digital clocks on your car radio, cell phone, wrist, etc.
Weather every 15 minutes.
Outside of morning drive, read above.
Radio remotes. Y
You are correct, 90% of them are a monumental waste of time and loaded with tons of b.s.
("Stop on by, we're having a GREAT time.")
Yeah, right!
As for serving lunch to the employees, it's part of doing business. If you buy them a lunch, they will likely ask you back.
As for the prize pigs, they're everywhere.
Some clients still belive in remotes and are willing to spend big bucks to have a radio station van come to their business.
Still sounds like crap but it helps pay the bills.
The most effective remotes are "appearances" at major events where there's a built-in crowd.
Sell these remotes to those clients and everyone wins.
(Broadcasting LIVE at the State Fair, brought to you by__________.)
I know us radio geeks are tired of hearing the same songs over and over.
That being said, the public wants to hear their handful of favorites songs over and over again.
99% of the stations that vastly expand their playlists, fail.
All of this being said, we are now faced with information/entertainment competition from places we never imagined just a few years ago.
You can now log on and instantly get the latest local, state, world news/sports/weather/time.
Satellite radio, internet radio and more choices in the future.
I-pods, where you are now your own music director, without the annoying d.j.'s talking over an annoying music bed, AND no 15 minutes of commercials an hour.
We now return you to your radio dream!!
