airpab said:
Name a station on Mt. Wilson that has a better "overall" signal then KRTH's?
I did quick maps (not Langley Rice ones that take too much time) of the Wilson signals that are 25 kw or more. The difference in the 64 dbu contours between the least of them, KCBS, and the best, KBIG, is a couple of miles. That means that they all cover the LA MSA except for a tiny piece of Orange County south of Laguna Niguel. Those signals are KBIG, KTWV, KRTH, KHHT, KLOS, and KLVE.
KRTH easily covers L.A., OC, The IE, Ventura, Simi Valley with a strong, clear signal.
None of them have what is considered the minimum signal for in home and at work rated listening, 64 dbu, in Ventura County (except for a tiny slice SE of Camarillo... which is in an unrated zone anyway). Similarly, they cover the closer parts of the IE market, but not all of it... and there is a big chunk around Fontana and Ontario that is unrated, too.
Most of San Diego County and all the way up past Santa Barbara too!
Nope, not with a usable signal where 70% of listening takes place... at home or at work.
And for an Oldies/Classic Hits station to be in the Top 10 (let alone Number 1) in a major market, is nothing short of spectacular.
It's 11th in the sales demos, as has been posted by our board's ratings expert, Radioresearcher.
It says that this music has a broad appeal, with at least a passive, accepting listenership in the younger crowd. (in the car with Mom or Dad or in stores)
No, it does not. What happens is that the PPM picks up "forced listening" by parents to a kid's station or by the kids to the parent's station. They don't have to like it to show up in PPM... they just have to hear it.
You didn't even address the fact that KRTH is blasting in many local places of business all over SoCal? That fact alone has got to be a factor when selling the station.
That is a point that sellers would avoid... it means "they didn't listen by choice, so I want to advertise on a station that the listeners want to hear and that they turn up to enjoy."
First, with all of the passive listeners in the store, hearing the music and jingles...and then many of them liking what they hear and possibly even tuning in when they get in their cars?
It does not happen that way. People ignore things they don't like, and have no idea that they were listening. Look for the Coleman study that shows that a big percentage of cume... that comes from passive hearing... is picked up by the PPM yet the person has no idea they were listening to that particular station... because they mentally tuned it out.
Is that accounted for in the PPM's??
Yes. If your ears can hear it, so can the PPM, and it gets counted if the listening is for enough minutes to get credit for a quarter hour.
Probably not, but is it not frosting on the cake for an Ad sell?
Not in LA. Transactional selling is "will you meet my CPP goals?" "Will you give me some remotes and contests?" Touchy feely does not pass agency internal audits or client audits.
I'm reasonably sure that the Ad Reps are very aware of this and play it up appropriately when pitching the station or cluster of stations.
It's likely they avoid that subject like the plague.
And the Top 40 sound is far from a memory. It is a time-tested formula that continues to thrive.
Yes, what share of listening does CHR (today's name for the same thing, thanks to R&R) have today in most markets? Usually it is about 45 points below being even a majority. And even in the 70's, CHR was not even the top format... so its only a piece of the total radio audience that wants to hear those songs again. And again. And again.
Kaye & Co. have succeeded in solidfying KRTH, as being synonomous with SoCal...a fact no one, even you DE, can dispute!
That's just not true. KRTH is synonymous with one lifestyle. The market has probably 60% to 70% of its population made up of people who did not grow up on Top 40 hits... so KLVE or KLAX or KDAY or KOST or KKGO are also reflections of pieces of the SoCal bouillabaisse of ethnicities, origins and lifestyles.