So we’re starting off with something that didn’t work 2 years ago? This is basically the same exact station before The Freak signed on. The only thing that’s changed is the music has aged even more and there’s no talk yet. From my own observations, it appears that Ben & Skin will be back soon. They might as well just hire everyone back, since it seems that no one is open to change.
I agree with you and Kramer on this point. Going back to something that wasn't working two years ago isn't likely to work today either. The only way to get it to work is to cut costs to the nub and hope to keep billing the same. That would make for a boring radio station, but, if Ben & Skin are coming back, that doesn't seem to be in the offing either.
I also feel like being safe at the beginning could backfire. If their plan is to tweak as time goes on, they’re setting false expectations. The only people tuning in now are us and former listeners. I don’t think they’re really gaining anyone new at this point.
Problem is, other stations are playing your target audience's favorite songs, and you need to play them, too, if you want to get members of that audience to listen. It's radio, not rocket science. Figuring out your target audience's favorite songs is easy, and you don't have some formula no one else does. When stations don't overlap at least a little, that either means they're targeting a completely different audience or aren't going to get enough listeners. When 94.5 The Edge was new, it was a cool station for a small audience, but even it added a handful of songs stations like Y95 and The Eagle played fairly quickly.
While they might do better with women than The Fan or The Ticket, WFAN and KLAC aren't great performers among women, at least not regularly, by any objective measurement.
Women in Dallas are different than the female demographic in Chicago, New York/New Jersey or LA. KEGL could‘ve relaunched as an all male country format, women in Dallas/southern regions would still listen
Of course, they're different. That's why KSCS and KPLX get a higher percentage of the female audience than KKGO and why women in New York don't have that option. While some rock stations might overindex among females, you're not likely to find one that's in the top-5 among women. Fluke surveys happen once-in-awhile, but rock, sports, talk, and hip-hop aren't formats that attract many women. That's not going to change much across the country. Dallas and Atlanta aren't so different that women there want rock and sports talk in droves. While the Big A is correct that advertisers care more about reaching women than men, if no one cared about reaching men, no one would program to them. Granted, talk and sports tend to be better at getting male buys than music formats, but enough businesses need to reach men that radio has to have several approaches to target them.
Is anyone, anywhere still using an AOR format like KZEW/Q102 used to do? Is that even possible today?
It might still be around in a few places, but, in most markets, AOR stations got squeezed between classic, active, and alternative rock and couldn't survive. Only a handful of heritage AOR's are still around, and most of them either didn't have the competition in one of those directions and changed lanes before someone else could assume it or bought a station or already in one of those formats, flipped it, and took over that lane themselves.