oaktree said:You know, this is all terribly amusing to read, but, in actuality, makes little to no sense.
Yours is an unusually well thought out post, irrespective of my personal point of view, so I'd like to at least attempt to show you how the thinking goes on in, perhaps, a different sector of the industry. And I say this because I really believe that your feelings and mine are not nearly as opposed as you have so far concluded. In fact, I am wondering if the difference is based on the size of the market we are each involde in; in smaller markets, most clients can also be listeners. In bigger markets they are usually not even in the same state.
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.
I think the thread is still focused on its original subject. Keep in mind that radio only makes money if listeners are satisfied and copious. So if a broadcaster analyzes the economics, we are taking into account that to achieve certain goals, it is necessary as part of the process to make some listeners happy.
What is at issue is really simple: CBS-FM was declining in salable audience, and its revenues had declined significantly in recent years. If one projected the revenue and audience declines out another couple of years, there would be fewer "useful" listeners and lower income. So it all boils down to an analysis of whether Jack is on a better track to future revenue than the old format would have produced in the same time frame. The answer is a very clear "yes."
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?"
My opinion differs. I see programming as product development, in today's market driven mode. I see sales and revenue as marketing. I see managers as orchestrating the two... making sure there is a good product, and pushing for the maximum sales. This attitude satisfies both listener needs and makes the station sustainable.
You, in 90% of your many posts, some educated, some way off the radar,
I'm curious... what do you consider "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.
The fact is that revenues are our "report card." They determine, on a personal level, our income and employment. They also determine what is feasable programming-wise and what is impractical. The success of a station is the ability to monetize listenrship.
Rather than suppositions and guesses, is it not better to use the most accurate tools available, such as BIA, Arbitron, and other mesurements of both revenue and ratings success? This is a business, not fine art.
You also have a demonstrated bias against people over the age of 50.
I have most certainly not. I have explained that a commercial radio station in nearly all but the smallest of the rated markets can not sustain itself by programming to persons over 55.
The fact that you have several times used the "50" figure demonstrates that you have not read my posts. "Buys against 55+ are virtually non-existent" has been what I have said over and over. This is because such buys are so uncommon as to be mere exceptions to the rule. And the reason, as I have said, is that advertisers instruct their agencies on who to buy against, and 55+ is not in those instructions. In essence, radio is powerless to change this because there is no prejudice involved... just the return on investment of ad dollars spent.
If there were lots of 55+ buys, then there would be lots of stations targeting 55+. The fact that formats are dropped or changed or modified when they deliver too many older listeners over 55 shows that radio responds to advertiser needs. We'd do a great job serving 55+ listeners if there were a way to do so an make money. But there is no such way.
That is not personal bias... that is simple fact.
Rankings are one thing. Markets across the country are, in fact, quite different.
Not in sales. You are paid in proportion to the number of listeners you have and the desirability of those listeners. This is why Coke buys out of one national agency, not 400 local ones.
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.
I do disagree here. Selling at its best is showing an advertiser or their agency that they get good value. Value is a strict dollar spent to dollar earned in new sales relationship in most campaigns. I have sold in a half dozen countries, and many US markets and Demonstrating value, service and honesty work anywhere.
quote]Not all the pieces of the radio puzzle fit just from your "numbers," including both revenues or ratings. [/quote]
But the numbers are the only effective measurement of a station's ability to get listeners (ratings) and sales (revenue). Everything else is subjective. There are dozens of ways to get ratings. Were it simple, every staitons would be tied for first.
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.
I have to ask how many markets you have worked in in either sales or programming. I've had quite a lot of expereince in different sized markets (nearly all top 100 in the US) and I find it hard to believe that there is any difference in the basics, from El Paso to New York. Sure, the energy level and intensity of some markets is different from the more relaxed or slower paced manner of others, but the business is the same.
One station's $25 million doesn't equal another station's $25 million in many respects.
Nobody said they were. Even two similar billers in the same market will have different expenses and a different BCF depending on both format and management style. But the point is that, generally, it is a pretty accurate assesment to say the staiton with increasing revenues is a better station than the one on the slide or that the one with $10 million in billings is better than the one with $5 million.
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.
Who said this was not true. News fomrats are the most expensive, while some ACs or Smooth Jazz ones are the least expensive among major formats. That's part of why we see very few all newsers outside the top 10 markets... not enough cume, not enoough revenue. But every market is the same int hat you program to the larger available audience segments, preferably uncontested ones.
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.
In other words, they evaluate the CPP (I have not seen CPM used for much more than a decade) where a target CPP is established for each buy based on the demo and market size (in other words, the delivery of each pint). CPP is used as it forms the basis for market R&F analysis to achieve the actual impression goals of the campaign.
"Power ratio" is not a sales term. And agency buyers are not interested in hunches or unquantifiable qualities. Their job is to place buys in each market that, together, achieve the goals of the campaign for R&F. Buyers are, for tehmost part, low on the agency food chain and safe buys are always preferred. In fact, this is why 2 to 4 book averages are used, not single books, in many shops.
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.
First, there are no "ratios" in agency sales. It is all about meeting CPP... either by rate, bonus spots, adding merchandising or remotes or some other quantifiable aspect. And then it is about running R&F on the whole buy to make sure that the goals are reached for the total market buy in terms of coverage (reach) and individual impressions (frequency). The CPP concept is the measure of "affordable" and is set in advance. Meet the goal, and get the buy. Don't meet it and you take a pass.
Usually, those buys are in the top 10 stations and always in the top five.
... in the target demo. If the goal is 35-44 women, then there is one set of stations. If it is 21-44 men, another. This is why 15th ranked WFAN in NY can be the second or third highest biller. In markets like LA, NY, Chicago, Dallas, Houston, etc. where there are lots of dollars ($400 million to $1.1 Billion) there may be 25 stations that are top 5 in some buying demo based on ages, sex, ethnicity or even geographic location of a client's locations.
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.
Where did you get the idea I might think that you can sell agencies based on waiting for the phone to ring? In my last GSM / NSM positon, we had 144 agencies in our market, ranging from McCann and Y&R to little affairs with two or three employees. Selling was a combination of service, honest scheduling, accurate and timely invoicing, building relationships of trust and offering competitive value pricing.
You tend to mix things a lot.
I'm sorry but I don't see this. Perhaps if you got a grasp on the terms and the metrics of radio you would not be confused. CPM is not used. CPP is. Power Ratios are not a sales metric. There are dozens of buying demos inside 18-54, not just one. Radio is a business, not a charity.
We're either "irrelevant" on points you don't grasp
Name one. So far, as I am trying to explain, you don't grasp the concepts and underpinnings of sales. You are making quiete an accusation (you said, slightly more politely, that I am either stupid or ignorant) which you don't explain.
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.
Yes, it is a numbers based proposition when you sell to agencies. That is why we call such ratings based, CPP measured business called "transactional sales" because they are pure numbers plays. Local direct is often less transactional, but in bigger cities clients that can afford radio are pretty smart and also quantify the buys, although they may be less rigid on demos and such.
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.
Really bad analogy. Only one team can win the series. But in the markets I have named, 25 or 30 stations can all be big winners, and there can also be smaller winners as well. In fact, there can be 8 or 10 stations with very similar BCF.
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.
Golly. In March (actuals) Jack was #7 in NY in both 12+ and 25-54, and #3 in 10-3 in 25-54. It's billings are rising, and are probably now ahead of what the old format would have been doing were it to have continued in its revenue slide and ratings losses in sales demos.
See, this is where a rational analysis of numbers trumps an emotional reaction that is based on personal taste or resentment over a lost format.
JACK-FM has it's fans ... Just not enough of them.
Top 10 25-54 is not good enough? It's good enough to bill $35 million or more.
The suits want to see $25-million in revenues now...not $16-million like last year.
They told you this personally? Actually, the station is on track to do maybe $27 this year. Depending on the overall market revenues, maybe $30. The first year of a format is rough... buyers do not want to go with one or two books, so they wait for a 4-book average or get very low rates and point delivery guarantees.
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.
#7 25-54. Nicely over a 3 share.
But it's far from being number 1.
Again, this is not a horse race, a basball series or a NASCAR event. There are dozens of winners in NY. When the # 15 station can bill $50 million, it is not even necessary to be #1.
And oldies did a lot better with a 4 share, even with and extra $7 million thrown in.
Revenues from 2000 to 2004 were off way over 20%, and they would have been down to about $20 this year... while listeners were getting older and older. The 25-54 today is greater than the age vs. time projection of oldies would have been.
Obviously, this is not about sales or programming per se. It is about your favorite station. A format that was becoming a liability, not an asset.
Why don't you get a satellite radio?