Re: Is it possible for a Radio Station that doesn't play the same songs over & over?
oldies76 said:
Who says WE have to hear "familiar" songs over and over, everyday or every week?? If radio does not play OUR favorite personal songs, then why listen?? Who's to dictate what songs ALL OF US must hear, based on the opinions of a few?? No wonder most people have negative comments about what's on radio and the LACK of favorites. A station's set list of 400 or 800 songs is not like by everyone, that is guaranteed! How about the other 2000 songs that were released in the day?? What about those songs....
When you speak about "a few" you are probably speaking of the folks who participate in research for a radio station.
Well, how about the "few" who participate in radio ratings? In Los Angeles, a city of about 11 million 12+, there are around 3,000 participants in the PPM. With the average percent of people using radio from 6 AM to Midnight being about 10, that means that 300 people with meters are determining the shares for the 87 stations in the LA metro and the dozens of additional stations that get into parts of the market.
At any given moment, the top couple of stations in LA are represented by perhaps a dozen to 15 meters.
Yet you cast aspersions at structured, well recruited station research that will have a hundred or more participants several times a year, or callout research that will have hundreds of monthly inteviews.
All of business depends on research that takes a representative sample of consumers to show what present time reality is. There is no economically viable way to use larger samples, and there is no reason to do so as the smaller samples can be proven, via replication, to accurately represent reality at an affordable cost.
There is a reason why the government only does a Census every 10 years... it is too hard and too costly. And when they do it, the results take a year to tabulate. To do a radio census in LA would likely cost more each month than the entire market's gross revenue in a year!
The reason that any particular playlist is the size it ends up being is that all the songs that are not strongly negative to significant groups of listeners have been included and all the songs that are broadly negative to many groups of listeners have been excluded. Songs that will cause proven tune-out, often verified by instantaneous monitoring of PPM meters via MediaMonitors, are excluded and those that hold audience are played.
Why would a station play songs that they know cause listeners to leave and go to other stations? Those "2000 songs" you mention are proven PPM audience killers for terrestrial radio.