Barry45RPM said:Todays program Directors no longer have the innate talent for Programming or directing the content of the station that employs them. They turn to researcher who are reccomending the same thing to every client, and radio is turning into a scientifically blended formula that all stations in a market buy.
Researcers do not suggest formats; listeners, when polled, indicate what they like. Researchers do not dictate songs; listeners, via AMT's do. Researchers do not "recommend" formats at all; in aperceptual project the discover things ranging from defects or dislikes about specific, local stations to needs that are not being satisfied.
The talent comes into play when the PD sets out to design a station that satisfies a listener need. No market researches the same as any other, because the ethnic makeup and the competitive array and many other things determine what is needed in each place.
A programmer should have in his belly, and idea, a concept, in which he wants his station to go, and have the talent to bring it to the airwaves so that the public he wants to reach will be drawn to it because it is a work of art. Radio is an art, not a researched formula.
But if you don't find out what the listener group you want to attract wants, the result will be that all that creative effort is lost because the PD is satisfying himself or herself, not the audience.
There are no formulas in research.
If the Format of a Program Director fails to meat reasonable goals, he should be gone, not kept on to tweak his art form with outside advice, or manage the next researched Format the station wants to try.
You know that the original Top 40 station, in 1952, was researched? And every one since has been?
Programmers with talent seem to be scoffed at because they do what "feels right for the art form" rather than what research tells them to do.
Nobody is scoffing at Kevin Weatherly of K-Rock and Jack in LA... he is very creative, but uses tons of research.
As far as 101.1 is concerned, Jack isn't working. You can tweak it all you want... CBS is going to stick with it untill they either sell the station or simply can't take it anymore, rather than make the admission that they mad a mistake with this format.
Please look at 25-54.
If they ran the Oldies format like they are running Jack, with minimal expensive "Legacy Jocks", they'd be very successfull with an Oldies format Playing 1958 thru todays music, just like the CBS-FM of old did.
If you play songs from the 50's, your youngest listener will be way over 55. Out of the sales demos, and useless for financial success. That is the exact reason they switched formats... CBS-FM was mostly out-of-demo listeners.