I'm just wondering what happened to the ratings for May? The ratings for Riverside and San Bernardino are available but not Los Angeles for radio online, does anyone know why?
Here is the statement released by Nielsen Auidio...and someone certainly likes capital letters!
"After reviewing preliminary data for the NIELSEN AUDIO LOS ANGELES PPM market, we discovered inconsistencies with the household ratings that led us to conduct a more in-depth analysis of the data. Based on this review, NIELSEN has decided to remove a household from the panel for not meeting our quality standards. MAY monthly and week-four data for the LA PPM market will be released on TUESDAY, JUNE 17th."
And if erroneous data from a single household can have such a huge impact on the monthly ratings, shouldn't Nielsen Audio start using a much larger sample of households?
The eagerly awaited Los Angeles ratings (age 6+ overall) for May 2014:
http://ratings.****************/cgi-bin/rol.exe/arb003
KRTH up strongly to #2;
KLVE up nicely;
KFI + KYSR on downward trends;
KXOL on an upward trend.
I don't think it's difficult to understand at all. In fact, David has explained it many times.The ratings prove that KRTH's core listeners are somehow able to enjoy hearing the same few songs over and over and over and over and over and over and over.....but I will never understand why.
I don't think it's difficult to understand at all. In fact, David has explained it many times.
The vast majority of KRTH listeners do not listen for long periods of time. They are more likely to listen several times a day, for shorter periods of time. They are also more likely to listen at the same approximate times of day every day.
Anyone who knows how to program rotations and separation coding in Selector, MusicMaster, or any of the other scheduling software that's out there can keep songs from repeating at the same time of day fairly easily. So let's do the math:
Presume a 500 title library, and that a typical listener will tune in three times a day for 20 minutes each time. That listener will hear perhaps five songs each of those tune ins, or 15 songs per day. That represents 3% of the library. If the rotation is set to prevent repeats within the same hour (encompassing the 20 minute periods of our typical listener) for as long a period that is possible without breaking other scheduling rules, it can easily be more than two weeks before that listener hears a song repeat, because 3% x 14 days = only 52% of the library, which keeps this a conservative estimate. Two weeks is long enough a period that a song which resonates positively with the average listener (and that's where the testing comes in) doesn't feel excessive. To the contrary, it feels more like "gee, I haven't heard that song for a couple of weeks!" Gee, I wonder why that would be the case ...
If you're "hearing the same few songs over and over and over and over and over and over and over" you're obviously listening much more than the average listener. And stations program to the average listener, not the more-than-average ones.
Clear enough, I hope?
It is successful because it programs based on the way the majority of people use radio. The "hard core users" are the ones who listen far longer than the majority of listeners do. Therefore, the goal is to not insult the majority, while recognizing that there will always be some in the minority who may feel insulted as a result.I know of no other business that insults its hard core users for the benefit of those who only sample the product like radio does. But we can all agree it is successful. Right? Right??
KRTH is obviously doing that well, based on the ratings jump.
(And I sound just like David.)
I know of no other business that insults its hard core users for the benefit of those who only sample the product like radio does. But we can all agree it is successful. Right? Right??
KXOL on an upward trend.
L.A. Times article with emphasis placed on the morning show ratings:
http://www.latimes.com/entertainmen...ngs-controversy-kxos-ksca-20140617-story.html
KXOS' "El Mandril" went #4-#14 April to May while share % went 4.3-2.7.
KSCA's "El Bueno, La Mala y El Feo" went #1-#4 while share % went 4.6-4.1.