Re: Arbitron reality.
Thanks for the information, David. I truly appreciate it.
However....
The "....opinion of an estimate" quote came from a lecture on ratings by Walt Sabo in 1990. I looked it up in a book at 94Q in Atlanta, and sure enough there it was. (I was in elementary school in the 60's.)
The "legalese" statement is the only real thing in any ratings book. They tell you that "The reliability of audience estimates cannot be determined to any precise degree...." So we take the whole thing on faith, right?
Don't get me wrong....Arbitron has been really good to me. But I took the wins with the same grain of salt as I took the (fortunately rare) losses. But honestly, do you really believe these numbers to be as accurate as you say?
Diaries, and people meters give consistant results....in Philly. But doesn't it follow that most methodologies would work better in a large, established metropolis? Better sampling rates, and response....A more stable populace....Stronger civic traditions....Much better radio?
How about markets from #30 to #50? Here in Las Vegas, the only thing that's consistant in Arbitron numbers is the volatility.
By the way, nice to talk to a real broadcaster, and not a vaporous alias...
Jon-David Wells
Fearless Broadcaster
Thanks for the information, David. I truly appreciate it.
However....
The "....opinion of an estimate" quote came from a lecture on ratings by Walt Sabo in 1990. I looked it up in a book at 94Q in Atlanta, and sure enough there it was. (I was in elementary school in the 60's.)
The "legalese" statement is the only real thing in any ratings book. They tell you that "The reliability of audience estimates cannot be determined to any precise degree...." So we take the whole thing on faith, right?
Don't get me wrong....Arbitron has been really good to me. But I took the wins with the same grain of salt as I took the (fortunately rare) losses. But honestly, do you really believe these numbers to be as accurate as you say?
Diaries, and people meters give consistant results....in Philly. But doesn't it follow that most methodologies would work better in a large, established metropolis? Better sampling rates, and response....A more stable populace....Stronger civic traditions....Much better radio?
How about markets from #30 to #50? Here in Las Vegas, the only thing that's consistant in Arbitron numbers is the volatility.
By the way, nice to talk to a real broadcaster, and not a vaporous alias...
Jon-David Wells
Fearless Broadcaster