You know, this is all terribly amusing to read, but, in actuality, makes little to no sense. The thread started about the JACK-FM format on CBS-FM, then to the ratings, then to how JACK-FM in NYC has not fulfilled it's goal of surpassing what it did in ratings and billings as an oldies station. Now, we're into political philosophizing.
Let me add, again, to this discussion that has wavered so.
David - As broadcasters, we listen in one ear as just that, and with the other, as a listener. With one eye, we look at the current revenue of what the result of that listening is and with the other, we look at the bottom line. From that, we determine success, failure or "are we on the right track?"
You, in 90% of your many posts, some educated, some way off the radar, look at everything from a book of computer sheets culled from BIAfn. You see only finances. You see only revenues. You make comparisons of one station to another, from one station in ranking based on those revenues to a station across the country.
You also have a demonstrated bias against people over the age of 50.
Rankings are one thing. Markets across the country are, in fact, quite different. What works in one doesn't always work in another. One sales effort in New York may not measure the same kind of effort in Seattle. You, of all people, know that.
Not all the pieces of the radio puzzle fit just from your "numbers," including both revenues or ratings. That's the way radio is from market to market. If they all worked as well everywhere, there would only be one sales staff, we'd all be guaranteed the same or similar revenues and a lot of radio people on these boards would be happy working. But they aren't, and rightfully so.
One station's $25 million doesn't equal another station's $25 million in many respects. In fact, I can tell you a few million dollar properties who make far less than $25 million but are quite a bit more profitable than those that are ... and so can you.
We, as listeners, can tell the "tale of the tape" by what we see, without analyzing everything to death. Sure, "power ratios" and "CPM" can all be done automatically, but you know as well as I, that many agency buys are based on what's hot and what's not. They could care less about all that crap. They look at the demo cell numbers important to their client(s), the best deals they can get and a fair return on a cost-per-thousand basis, based on the number of stations and the number of dollars to divide for a successful buy for the client.
Some, while, thankfully, not using the 12+ beauty contest numbers, still use the "horse race game" in sizing up a market. and the buyers could care less about "ratios" and such. They're looking to make affordable buys with a decent return from the market they are buying and that's it. Usually, those buys are in the top 10 stations and always in the top five. After that, it's a crap shoot depending on the working between station and buyer, not just sitting around waiting for the phone to ring.
You tend to mix things a lot. We're either "irrelevant" on points you don't grasp or I, for one, find you "generalizing" too much. But it's a "live by the numbers, die by the numbers" game and the posters have every right to look at it that way because that how most people understand and play the game. They buy what's good for their clients.
A last place baseball team might still pull 3 million people a year, but that doesn't make them "good," or a World Series champ. In my opinion, JACK-FM, a gutted talent-less vast wasteland of iPod on shuffle, is not what New York listeners want, and the ratings and revenues show that.
JACK-FM has it's fans ... Just not enough of them.
The suits want to see $25-million in revenues now...not $16-million like last year. An increase overall of .1 doesn't equal a five-share, or a four, probably close to a three, maybe, if that, in the 25-54 cell. But it's far from being number 1. And oldies did a lot better with a 4 share, even with and extra $7 million thrown in.
Bet the suits at CBS had that now... And that's the point. What's that they say about figures lying...? Thanks for the education, but lighten up just a little.