Mac Black said:Do I really need to be reminded that I'm drinking Coke?
Yes. That's why Coke spends billions on advertising, point of purchase (packaging, labels, shelf talkers, decorated cups, signage, decorated fountains, etc.
My taste buds work, my eyes work. Everybody already knows what Coke is.
I know, also, what Pepsi is. I don't like it as much, so I don't consume it by choice. This is not about familiarity, it is about image and brand reinforcement.
When I'm at the grocery store, do u really think I'm sitting there thinking about a Coke ad I saw on tv? Do u really think I'm sitting there thinking about a Coke can I saw on the side of the street?
No, your subconscious has built up a feeling that is positive about Coke, and you buy it over all other brands because buying and consuming it makes you feel good.
When I turn on my radio in my car, do u really think I'm turning to your station bc of the great liner I heard this morning?
But if you are not aware of the station (you may have heard it, but you did not listen and you did not carry away a feeling about it) you will not seek it out.
Everybody knows what an auditorium test is & it's overrated. If you're in the community, u know what people like, don't like, are tired of, etc.
I've seen this statement dis-proven so many times I have lost track. The litmus test is to have a PD estimate the scores on the first music test they ever do... I did it to myself 30 years ago. In my case, as programmer of a double digit share AC that was #1 in all female demos under 65, I was off by 20% or more on 80% 0f the songs. That's typical, by the way.
Only the active core will express opinions you may hear. And that core may not be the bulk of your listeners.
As for P2s & P3s only wanting to hear songs they've heard a million times & are familiar with is a bunch of crap. If I'm passing thru & I hear an unfamiliar song & it sounds good I'll stay & listen to it..nice breath of fresh air.
P2s and P3s definitely don't want deep cuts, as they are borderline unfamiliar and definitely unappealing. And most listeners over 25, faced with an unfamiliar song, tune out.
Besides, you're not catering to P2, P3...you're catering to those P1's who listen to u on a daily basis, who are loyal to the station, who know the personalities, know the name etc.
It's been proven in PPM that P1 status fluctuates, and that the average person cycles through several stations that at any moment may be P1, P2 or P3. If you want to get enough of the 1+ hours a week listening, you had better cater to P2 and P3 listeners. In fact, some stations... including some notable classic hits stations... don't even include P1s in AMTs. "they will listen anyway." But catering to the fluctuating P1, P2 P3 listener requires talking mostly to those who will listen only if the mix is perfect.
More importantly from a business aspect, businesses don't wanna advertise on a station with mostly fly by night listeners. If they don't have any loyalty to the station, what makes u think they'll go out & support these local advertisers & businesses?
Advertising is about exposure. For radio, the affinity with listeners has been studied and is not a metric used for buys... Arbitron even did an industry task force a year ago to look into an "engagement metric" (I was on the panel) and the effort did not result in a new measurement metric.
Again, since the times of McLuhan the idea of community have been changing. To many people, the neighbor down the block is not "community" but the friend on Facebook who lives in Kiev is.