Whoever that poster on RadioInk was, it sounds like they were tracking some of the convos here about the processing and the music sources.The post from a Jason makes me feel they are lurking here....
All that said, there was no real promotion.
I would think that with the younger demos -- Millennials and Zoomers -- it's not "Wow! There's this cool radio station!" but "check out my Spotify playlist!" or something similar. It's one reason why I thought that advertising the existence of the station would have helped. Word of mouth can only do so much in an internet steraming-centered world.Word of mouth may not be as important as it used to be as people spend less time with radio. If I'm asking someone what they’re listening to these days, I rarely hear it’s anything on the radio. It's almost always a track on a personal playlist. I can count the number of times I've heard, “Hey, did you hear that new radio station,” unprompted from anyone other than a radio person on one hand.
Country is the biggest radio format in the country, according to a post you made a year or two ago. I'm sure that stat still is fairly accurate. If the format is that popular, maybe less promotion is needed.How much promotion was done for ANY format flip? I bet the country fans will find this station without any promotion.
However, if you want visibility and your product is a niche product, maybe actual promotion would have helped.
radioinsight.com
I can't see 101.5 staying long term. Classic Country works usually in Southern states or rural areas not in major cities.Keep in mind that not all country is the same. The format on 101.5 is all classic country. No currents. Not unlike having a classic rock and rock station in the same market. Even if the new Bull gets the same numbers it got two years ago, it will be a vast improvement over what they got with AAA. The only station that will lose is the Wolf.
My expectation is that while classic country often appeals to an older demo, it will still be mostly 25-54, and also a bit younger than they were getting with AC.
I can't see 101.5 staying long term. Classic Country works usually in Southern states or rural areas not in major cities.
There are plenty of successful Classic Country stations...Even in some larger Southern/Western markets, it's hard to find a successful Classic Country station. Cox just sold 97.1 KTHT Houston to K-Love. Nobody else has rushed in to assume KTHT's Classic Country format.
It depends on what you consider 'classic country.' Seattle had three very unique country stations in the 90s. All very popular. So Seattle has a strong heritage with 90s country. People now in their 30s and 40s remember that time and that music.
Even in large Southern/Western markets where you'd expect a Classic Country station, there is none. Atlanta has two Country stations, where WUBL and WKHK are both contemporary. Same for San Antonio, where KCYY and KAJA are both contemporary. I'm not sure why Classic Country doesn't work, while Classic Hits and Classic Rock do so well. Denver has two successful Classic Rock stations and two Contemporary Country stations. But nobody is playing Classic Country.
In Seattle, two different companies, Bonneville and Lotus, both saw an opening for a second country station and decided to flip, not realizing the other was doing the same thing. But what was Lotus thinking, that it would enter the market with a country station that only plays older country music in a Northern city?
Country was more popular in the 90's than it is today.
Actually, in Denver, Audacy is programming "classic country": KQKS-HD2, rebroadcasting on a translator at 103.1, "Front Range Country 103.1", 250 watts from Lookout Mountain. As with so many other Lookout translators, the signal starts sputtering out east of downtown so it's not covering that much of the Front Range, but it does show up in the vanity numbers at sub-1.0 levels. And the imaging is quite good. Honestly, I'd rather have that on a full-market signal instead of yet another contemporary Christian station or sports-blather station, but them's the breaks.Even in large Southern/Western markets where you'd expect a Classic Country station, there is none. Atlanta has two Country stations, where WUBL and WKHK are both contemporary. Same for San Antonio, where KCYY and KAJA are both contemporary. I'm not sure why Classic Country doesn't work, while Classic Hits and Classic Rock do so well. Denver has two successful Classic Rock stations and two Contemporary Country stations. But nobody is playing Classic Country.