Exactly. The real challenge is to take what you can get with the nice December bump, but not let it dip back down too low the rest of the year.
That's too bad. I like Charley and he was put in a difficult position here in Dallas. I don't think they really gave him a fair chance to see if he could keep the recent momentum going, and now we'll never know.
True. The biggest challenge AC stations face is holding onto the audience that Santa brings them in that wonderful third phase. In 2000, agencies and other buyers were wide-eyed and ignorant that one phase (or in many years, just three weeks) would produce such incredible shares.
7 years later, they're all hip to the fact that one month does not make a radio station.
Most of them aren't even looking at a 4 book average anymore because of the inflated Christmas bump. I don't blame them.
If I was a buyer, I would expect to pay a premium to be on the air in early-mid December.
If I was a radio seller, I would expect to charge a premium to allow a buyer to be on my station during those 3-4 weeks. Arbitron has proven that Christmas means more listeners.
You want to reach a huge amount of passionate listeners? Buy me in early December, and I will deliver.
It's NO DIFFERENT than what network TV does during sweeps months. Except that radio is not nearly as adept as TV in selling its inventory.
So yes, the Winter book now tells the story.
I applaud Charlie and his work that gave KVIL their highest ratings in years. He's a smart programmer. But the trick has always been holding onto the "Santa Kiss".
Let's see where they eventually land.