TimeIsTight said:Spanish language and hip-hop stations draw advertisers who are specifically interested in reaching Hispanic or "urban" groups, with the money budgeted in those directions from the get go. Or the advertising is sold to businesses within those communities, like ethnic food companies, or hip hop clubs.
That is only partially true... a smaller and smaller part as time goes by, too.
I can't tell you how many cases of buys from agencies I've seen come into high-rated Spanish language stations with no Spanish copy or spots. A call-back gets a "Oh, I did not know you were in Spanish" and, generally, a solution is found for translation or production. Those are general market buys.
And general market buys include African American and Hispanic targeted stations more and more. Remember, the FCC had an inquiry about "No Spanish" and "No Urban" dictates on buys, and now requires wording on broadcast contracts that "certifies" that the buy does not discriminate... a vague but compelling reason not to ignore stations that serve specific minorities.
Stations of all kinds compete for general market buys... and as long as they make the demo targets of the client at the right CPP, they generally get bought. Yes, there are some clients that ignore, to their own loss, certain segments, but they are fewer and fewer as time goes by.
Country stations, on the other hand, are in competition for advertising dollars that are aimed at the wider more generic population, and are therefore in competition with other music and spoken word formats for the same business.
As are urban, urban AC, Regional Mexican, Spanish AC, tropipop and similar formated stations.
While it hopefully is true that the big media buying agencies acting on behalf of major national advertisers now just go by a formula of demographics, ratings and spot price, Country stations usually look for a lot of regional and local advertisers and that is where this perception of poorer than AC, or all news listeners can become a problem.
Having managed a country station in a medium market (represented by the very high-class Crystal rep firm back then) I can tell you that we took the largest share of national and regional buys in the market, and the competition was only based on CPP and meeting the target age demos.
If everything was just by the numbers, radio stations could replace their sales people with media buying websites similar to the way we order books from Amazon.
That is what is being developed... but it is at the client side that this originates, with stations presenting via the web by filling in pricing and other data, which the agency runs against ratings data to find the best efficiencies.
The bottom line is that in the NYC area, likely Country Music radio listeners are a smaller minority than the limited number of available commercial FM frequencies can provide a spot for, and as spoken word formats, like all news, or sports talk, move over to the FM band in competitive pairs, the crunch keeping Country out will only get worse.
The issue is one of potential audience, but not of buyer rejection. In NYC there is a smaller potential audience than most places due to the ethnic and immigrant populations, as well as the fact that there is not much of a country lifestyle to have kept the format alive in NY during the ups and downs of the music itself. If a country station could get a 3.5 share 25-54, you can bet it would be on the buys and would likely have a greater than 1.0 power ration, just as is seen in other markets.
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