Since those stations have relatively little direct competition, the succeed... moderately. They would serve clients and listeners much better if they had the resources to find what listeners really wanted... and what they did not want.
And the listeners of those small stations don't have to put up with the hype and nonsense bigger stations provide.
Chatter, long spot breaks and 400 song repetitive playlists and.......chatter.
Listeners of the smaller stations, some myself and others referenced you over time, are aiming at the older crowd who wants their music and not the hype. Why spend the money on resources??? Just play the dang music! Use the books and charts for guidance and that's it.
They certainly can save that money and pay their employees a heck of a lot more than they do today.
All those small town programmers have to do, is look at the playlists of large cities and incorporate that with the other songs they already play and you've got yourself a great mix of songs to play. That's what makes them unique and special which audiences like.
That's the problem, you refuse to look at the OTHER side of the spectrum. I realize life is great making $$$, but it can be done the other way as well, if implemented correctly. Something KRTH and others refuse to do.
And what I meant about KRTH going downhill, it's the programming methods and presentation of music, not the station as a whole. And doing it the other way will not destroy radio stations as you keep claiming. You tend to exaggerate.
Remember, when you programmed classic hits radio stations, it was decades ago. It's almost 2015, listeners expect changes and new things, not the same ole from your time.