Savage said:
Gooroo - I respectfully note your experience with HD. If you're not having delay problems or interference complaints, those are good things.
My response would be: interference complaints are a case-by-case situation. Your frequency allocation and market apparently luck out - you've got enough elbow room there so your HD isn't causing any problems. But where the interference exists: it's bad, and it's real. Don't just take WYSL's word for it. Ask Local Oscillator about HIS first-adjacent HD problems. And there are many, many others. As far as "listener complaints" about interference: of course you haven't received any, nor would you - ever. That's the cynicism behind the FCC "policies" about addressing HD interference - no listener will ever complain because they lack the technical expertise to identify the source or type. They just tune out when the noise is too bad, assuming "radio sucks, it's all staticky." Bad for the industry? You bet, even when HD interferors
skate on stepping on neighbors.
The average listener thinks radio sucks because XM mounted a HUGE multi-year advertising campaign in its early days that basically told everyone that radio sucked. It didn't improve their fortunes, but it did tarnish radio, or at least the public perception of radio. Practically everyone still uses it. XM's campaign was both a brilliant success and a failure.
The average listener also thinks Bose makes the very best audio products on Earth.
Why? Marketing. Great marketing! Part of Bose's marketing strategy is price fixing. Every retailer HAS to sell their products for the same price as every other retailer. There's also a 100% markup built into this pricing strategy. Retailers (and commissioned salespeople) make more money when they sell Bose than when they sell any other brand. The $700 Acoustimass system at Best Buy cost them $350. Is it any wonder that retailers try really hard to make the public believe Bose is superior?
This is just my own tacky opinion, but I don't think anyone who thinks Bose is the best there is would be qualified to identify interference or would even care about moderate amounts of it. These average listeners also build their personal music libraries with file sharing services these days, and are perfectly content to listen to low bitrate MP3s of dubious origin.
That's not to say that we shouldn't strive to produce a high quality product. I know I do.
Getting back to the original point of the thread: HD Radio is failing to make any significant impact for one reason and one reason only - the RADIO INDUSTRY DOESN'T SUPPORT OR MARKET IT PROPERLY!
Radio is a very effective marketing engine. We've sold an awful lot of Bose crap. We could sell this too, if we had the inclination. We don't. At least the right people don't. I have never once heard a radio advertisement for HD Radio that would entice the "average listener" to go out and buy one. There are nebulous promises of additional choices, but no details about what those choices might be. Stations could run effective promos for their own HD2 channels, but the program directors and general managers who are responsible for the ratings and revenue on the analog signals would prefer that NOBODY DISCOVER THEIR HD2. I've had this conversation with several PDs. None of them want their own HD subchannels to be successful because they perceive that success as lost listenership for them, potentially the loss of their ratings bonus and eventually their job. That's the way the average program director views HD Radio. It's a threat.
Not that I usually advocate for corporate control of anything, but if HD Radio is going to succeed, corporate is going to have to either take control of it or incentivize it. Corporate either has to steal airtime from their program directors to effectively promote the HD2 and HD3 channels or make their PDs and GMs want to promote HD effectively themselves. If I were Dan Mason, or Farid Suleman, or Lew Dickey or John Hogan I'd make HD2 the X Prize of radio. I'd offer a $50,000 bonus ($25k each) to the first PD/GM combo that gets an HD2 station to crack a 1.0 share.
The only thing holding HD Radio back is radio itself. Despite the technical shortcomings, both perceived and real, it has potential. I will admit that the potential is slipping away into the abyss of technological irrelevance, which is a shame after so much has been spent to build out the infrastructure to support IBOC.
At this point, I don't see HD Radio ever going away. Data services completely unrelated to the host stations have already made their way onto the HD platform, and if nothing else, HD will essentially offer digital SCA type services.
The key to HD Radio's success is getting traditional radio types out of the way, or incentivizing them properly.