TheBigA said:amfmxm said:More huge potential non-profit categories... where the underwriting restrictions don't apply...
Hmmm...those are the kinds of folks who came to us as fellow non-coms, and asked for freebies. We're all in the same boat. Please promote our poetry reading with free publicity. A lot of colleges are crying about endowments that have collapsed, or state funding that has been cut. But hey, no reason not to try. It just wasn't a big area for us. The only way it worked was when we did co-op grant applications, using our airwaves to further the mission of the local theater group. And we did a lot of content sharing with the big powerful PBS station. But they never spent money on us.
Yup... been there, done that. Frankly, many of them still do expect us to do everything for free. (BTW, I've been on the dirty, feelthy commercial side professionally now for years, but am still involved with non-comms as an advisor--so see it from both sides).
We have a boiler-plate speech that we unfurl for those situations that goes something like this: "Do you actually have a cash budget for this? You know that we're always happy to help in any way we can, but--as odd as it seems--this is how we feed our kids and pay our mortgages, so instead of spending the cash with the newspaper and asking us for freebies, please consider spending the cash with us instead--and we'll still go way beyond the call of duty to make sure you're happy!"
Thing is, often they do have a cash budget. And the bigger the project (the part-time MBA program... the new Nursing program... the Theatre Department's summer season...) the bigger that budget.
In one of our markets--home to one of the big state flagship universities--our commercial stations generate significant billing from these sources.
And so do the public TV and radio stations.