Bloomberg Business Week (on Bloomberg Radio) this weekend is featuring a story about Howard Stern and his Sirius contract.
Something the reporter said made a lightbulb go off in my head. He speculated about whether Howard could now do for Internet Radio what he did for Sirius 10 years ago -- if he wanted to take up the challenge. The idea being that a Howard Stern site might be the go-to point that could help Internet Radio reach critical mass. Critical audience mass also means critical advertising mass and because it's the Internet advertisers have the ability to target more specifically.
The lightbulb is that, when you think about it, that's what Facebook did for social media, YouTube for video, etc. Before that there were plenty of places to find that content but no focal point. If Facebook and YouTube disappeared tomorrow people would just go elsewhere. But because they're so widely used they're seen as indispensable.
Yes, we already have iHeart Radio, TuneIn, etc. but that's no different from Satellite Radio, pre-Howard. It took a personality with a huge, loyal following and all the publicity he was able to generate to really put Sirius on the map. Glenn Beck has attempted to do this for Internet Radio but he's way too narrow a niche.
So imagine a site with unique content that everyone talks about -- a "must hear." For many people, that could easily become tomorrow's "radio," the way Facebook is today's social media.
Until we have easy access to WiFi in cars maybe it's early, but the fact that not everyone has cable didn't stop HBO from becoming a go-to place for original content. Stern is in his 60s and probably doesn't need the challenge so maybe he's not the guy, but it's an interesting concept.
Something the reporter said made a lightbulb go off in my head. He speculated about whether Howard could now do for Internet Radio what he did for Sirius 10 years ago -- if he wanted to take up the challenge. The idea being that a Howard Stern site might be the go-to point that could help Internet Radio reach critical mass. Critical audience mass also means critical advertising mass and because it's the Internet advertisers have the ability to target more specifically.
The lightbulb is that, when you think about it, that's what Facebook did for social media, YouTube for video, etc. Before that there were plenty of places to find that content but no focal point. If Facebook and YouTube disappeared tomorrow people would just go elsewhere. But because they're so widely used they're seen as indispensable.
Yes, we already have iHeart Radio, TuneIn, etc. but that's no different from Satellite Radio, pre-Howard. It took a personality with a huge, loyal following and all the publicity he was able to generate to really put Sirius on the map. Glenn Beck has attempted to do this for Internet Radio but he's way too narrow a niche.
So imagine a site with unique content that everyone talks about -- a "must hear." For many people, that could easily become tomorrow's "radio," the way Facebook is today's social media.
Until we have easy access to WiFi in cars maybe it's early, but the fact that not everyone has cable didn't stop HBO from becoming a go-to place for original content. Stern is in his 60s and probably doesn't need the challenge so maybe he's not the guy, but it's an interesting concept.