My view is that music policy is not the problem with this station. I don't even blame the signal. My view is that the NY audience for this station still doesn't know it exists.
Sorry, that's crap. This station has been there for, approaching, two years. The absolute best promotion is (and has always been) word of mouth. And the word of mouth is that The Block sucks, or else it would have more listeners in the core areas it's targeting. It's not the signal, unless you're targeting White Plains, or Hempstead/Uniondale, or Stamford. I used to be able to pull 94.7 in from Valley Stream on a cheapo table radio. (I just never wanted to, because "Family Radio" was like nails on a blackboard to me, but their signal was superior to Jersey signal I did want to tune in.) So it should not be a problem in the 5 boroughs or close-in suburbs, or anywhere in North Jersey.
It's the music. It's the talent. It's the format. Most importantly, it's being #4 in a four-competitor slice of the market. It's a less-than-elegant solution to a nonexistent problem.
In a non-US market where I have "involvement" there are loads of what they call there "digital billboards" which change image every 8 to 10 seconds. One of the group stations actually has a picture of every artist it plays and when its turn on the digital boards comes up, it shows the artist and, roughly, "Right Now On (station name) (Station Frequency)" The ad is a still, not a piece of a video, as running the video would have lots of shots where the artist is not seen.
The average view time for an electronic billboard in the market I referenced is around 5 seconds.
Totally anecdotally: those e-billboards tend to get put in the wrong place. Near a busy highway, with cars trying to whiz by at 60, 65, 70 mph ain't the right place, unless your goal is to cause accidents. (The one near where I live, just before an exit off a major freeway, has done that more than a few times. Too bright,
especially at night.) Unless the e-billboard is positioned next to the Midtown Tunnel toll plaza (or equivalent always-tied-up location), it's going to be ignored by drivers trying to arrive in one piece, and looking out for other drivers that aren't. (And if you're fixing your eyes on one of those billboards, you, by definition, aren't.)
The math in a market with 1000 meters: Average 6 AM to Midnight PUMM is about 6.0. So on average, there are 60 meters detecting actual listening. A station with a 5 share has 3 meters in an average quarter hour.
Which, for the application, is way too few samples. Probably by an order of magnitude. Sampling radio listening, which is an inherently mobile, interstitial (i.e., filling in the gaps between paying attention to more important things) style of listening, should not be being sampled the same way TV is (where you're in a chair or on a couch, paying attention to a program/stream/commercial or trying to decide what next to watch). TV is cognitively foreground most of the time, radio largely background. (With the exception of inherently foreground formats: news, sports, talk, where it helps to have your brain in at least first gear.)
Applying the statistical model for TV to radio is bastardizing the statistical mathematics. I wouldn't be surprised if the entire foundation of measuring listenership via PPM is flawed. I've read the rationales for doing it the way it's being done, but that does not mean the results are true and accurate.
Excuse me now, I need to chase the kids off the lawn.