TR1992 said:
If we could get radio stations into the hands of local people
who care about their station and the community that it serves, and get it out of the hands of CC, CBS etc. If they would put on formats right now that targeted teenagers that may not pay off right away but would build a future "customer" base.
If you give them a reason to listen to radio they would. Like I have already said if we don't get radio back into the hands of people who love radio and have a passion for it and out of the hands of people who only care about profit margins, radio will continue to be a shell of it's former self.
Great idea! You've got it! You get it! Now...reality check:
1. You get radio stations into the hands of local people ... how? First of all if YOU don't have any money, YOU won't get local people to spend a dime in an investment such as radio stations.
2. Radio stations are poor risk investments for private investors and for banks ... who have shunned radio investments for years. Why? Return on investment is risky. Why do you think there is no "real value" to most radio stations? They are leased from land to tower, to buildings to equipment. There is little "asset value." Staffing becomes, unfortunately, an expensive proposition ... with no guarantees that YOUR winning format will a) be popular in a competitive marketplace, b) attract numerous advertisers on a consistent basis -- not depending on any change in the local or national economy and c) because radio's track record in fiscal management for profits (since the 50s) is not that great. Less than 50% of stations today make money.
3. With high interest and debt-leveraging (because corporate radio cannot survive on onesy and twosy radio deals like they could 40 years ago ... there is a great deal of debt service. That's right ... you have to pay debt every month ... be it to stockholders or to your bank account, to pay for the purchase price. Owners don't take "paper" on many, if not most radio station deals today. Once sold, they don't want the station back due to your "miracle format" not working and the debt-service goes south. You can lose a radio station very quickly doing business that way ... and this is business. Ask Clear Channel, Citadel, Emmis, Entercom, Cumulus and everyone else who is losing their shirts today.
You are correct about the teen base. Absolutely right on. But everyone knows that teen tastes change like day and night. What happens when your "best format" or business model starts to falter when things change because tastes, trends, etc. change? Who do you think pays for that? You think investors stand idly by and say, "This too will pass?" Believe me ... they don't You'll be out of business (and this is a business) in three months. Ownership is no time for "experimentation" or "patience" when it comes to spending money ... yours or other people's.
You'd damned well better care about profit margins. Radio stations don't come cheap and you're pretty much out there in a sea of financial sharks (investors and stockholders) who want only two things: Their money back and profit from that investment. Period.
"Passion" alone will not guarantee you success. There are plenty of great sounding radio stations that, unfortunately, don't make "enough" money.
With "other modes of delivery" of the product that radio used to call it's own, radio, today, does not provide the leading way it once did. It's now about content and delivery ... not just "live jocks, great liners and new jingles." It's about where people are when they listen to what THEY want (not what corporate thinks they want) and what they listen to for that content. The Internet is it. Not terrestrial radio.
And you, from what it sounds like, are a 24/7 AM listener, right? I bet not.
It's a business, my friend. Deal with it. Before you can fight the war ... know, first, who the enemy is. Then, have a plan...not a "hope" on how to fight it. The fight like hell, know the costs, be capitalized to do so and then, you might have a chance to win.
Finally, you can't, today, live in the past. It will never return. What Storz, McLendon, Drake, Joseph, Burkhart-Abrams and so many others created back then was focussed on a medium that was king. It reinvented itself out of necessity. There was TV. There weren't 14,000 thousand choices of radio like today, no satellite "radio", no Internet, no MP3 players, no iPod, no cellphone.
Radio, as we knew it, was exciting, live, alive and vibrant. Today ... it's voice tracked, understaffed and underperforming financially because advertisers don't like what radio offers to many times and because there are other alternatives.
Time's ... they have changed.
But instead of rhetorical thought ... how about some solutions to your thought ... and, please, base it on how you would do it from a business viewpoint ... because without knowing business ... you don't know how to save radio. Do you have any ideas? And please ... don't say it's HD. Where do you get the money?
[/quote DEAR OLDTREE, Do you care to share with the rest of us on this board which big radio company you work for? :-*