SFStatic said:The people meter does break out people who work vs people who don't. It's important, because people who work are bigger consumers of radio. People who don't work are bigger TV viewers.
raydioheadfm said:Always insightful David...I was so wrapped up in making sure it was understood that the FM counted that I forgot the actual way to explain it as total line!
As to the oldies question, do you think someone else will attempt it in SF? CBS will not, but Entercom maybe? Or CC if they choose to dismantle smooth jazz?
What "they" would you mean? KCBS is cuming over 1.2 million a week, is #1 in AM drive, and is proving that the FM simulcast works. Boring?
They've been doing pretty much the same thing for 40 years. Looks like it works. The story here is pretty clear: KGO's reign is over (and this time, without a Christma music "asterisk").
raydioheadfm said:As for 1550, this is the first time the station has shown up 4 consecutive weeks at better than a .1...give it a chance...people are going to have find it organically...no marketing, no nuttin!
DavidEduardo said:SFStatic said:The people meter does break out people who work vs people who don't. It's important, because people who work are bigger consumers of radio. People who don't work are bigger TV viewers.
Working vs. non-working is a qualitative metric. The PPM does not differentiate between listening at work and other listening out of the home.
AnimatronicAbeLincoln said:What "they" would you mean? KCBS is cuming over 1.2 million a week, is #1 in AM drive, and is proving that the FM simulcast works. Boring?
They've been doing pretty much the same thing for 40 years. Looks like it works. The story here is pretty clear: KGO's reign is over (and this time, without a Christma music "asterisk").
Agreed. Some people might consider NPR "boring," but it has a huge number of listeners.
It's really, really interesting... CBS picked up a couple of shares 12+ by simply simulcasting an existing product and making an existing brand more available. I bet they'll be looking at doing this elsewhere.
Question for anyone living in SF - were there any TV or billboards or any kind of outside marketing at all that KCBS was now available on an FM station?
AnimatronicAbeLincoln said:What "they" would you mean? KCBS is cuming over 1.2 million a week, is #1 in AM drive, and is proving that the FM simulcast works. Boring?
Question for anyone living in SF - were there any TV or billboards or any kind of outside marketing at all that KCBS was now available on an FM station?
Yes - at least in San Francisco, CBS made a big Muni bus buy. Possibly a tribute to the late KFRC, the ads say "News Rocks on 106.9 FM," and "Traffic Rolls on 106.9 FM."
I believe CBS Outdoor has the contract for SFMTA (Muni) bus ads, so they can probably do this with minimal expense - just the cost for the graphic layout, the printing and the cardboard (or whatever) the ads are printed on, and whatever percentage they're required to kick back to SFMTA.
DavidEduardo said:norcalvet said:106.9 KFRC-FM didn't show in the PPM because it has now been absorbed by the KCBS calls...the simulcast has been officially noted by Arbitron & they will never be shown as individual frequencies again.
Arbitron calls this "Single Line Reporting" and stations that are 100% simulcasts can elect single line reporting and consolodate all simulcasts in a market under the elected primary calls. Arbitron dies not "note" the simulcast, but, instead, follows the desire of the stations as recorded on each facilities SIP (Station Information Packet).
SFStatic said:Correct there is no work/home/car anymore. It's just at home and away from home (or actually out of range of the charging dock, technically.) Still, you can see the breakout of working vs non-working people, call it what you will.
norcalvet said:....Although we would like to know what ratings 106.9 is getting, KCBS wants everyone to think their numbers are from
one entity or product, not 2 different frequencies...resistance is futile.
djj said::
Obviously, CBS Radio asked for "Single Line Reporting" by January, for KFRC-FM
still registered as a 0.7 in both the Holiday and December 2008 PPM Ratings,
well after the simulcast with AM 740 began...at least, according to the radio-info
ratings link given earlier in this thread...
My inquiry: is there any way to know how the FM is doing relative to the AM?
I would think some entity or entities would want to know...
Second question: does the PPM receive HD-2 signals?
If so, would KFRC-FM's HD-2
be received as a "KCBS" read, or the HD-2 signal's own?
I'm curious, for I noticed on the San Jose book there are TWO "streams" in the PPM ratings for that market...
norcalvet said:2) HD2 & Streams will show up in the PPM separately from any radio station numbers...if they show up at all...they are all separate.
Lkeller said:Actually, KOIT recently made a slight adustment to the slogan. It's now: "...Arbitron rated number one for those who work." . I'm not sure what that could possibly mean, or how you would quantify that.
DavidKaye said:Lkeller said:Actually, KOIT recently made a slight adustment to the slogan. It's now: "...Arbitron rated number one for those who work." . I'm not sure what that could possibly mean, or how you would quantify that.
How about "...for those people who are not listening at home"? Obviously they want to encourage work listening, so a slogan like "Arbitron rated #1 for people on the go" doesn't really match the sedentary workplace situation. I think KOIT gets lots of listeners from the fact that it is played in stores and offices as a sort of demo of what the station puts out.