This is a great summary on music testing, and why stations play what they play. These are the facts.
The only thing I caught that I question is "testing all the possible songs with listeners" . They do not test all the possible songs. They test the ones they want to.
That is a pure station staff level decision. In my experience running the research department of a larger broadcaster, we encouraged stations to add plenty of "what if" songs such as crossovers, older songs that might be "anthems" and, particularly, songs that got play on new media sources.
For example, one LA station usually found 280 to 320 songs as playable, but it tested around 600 four times a year. Unless those "what if" songs did miserably on the first try, we might put them in a second test. And some songs that did not test a year or two ago might work today: they could have rested enough or "come of age" in the meantime.
I remember when I was at YRK in the 80's, on a music test, the song "Mountain Music" from Alabama was thru the roof in testing. Like #1 by far. 3 months later, it was a dud according to the "Music test".
Burn. The best thing to do with those is rest the songs and try again in the next test.
There were also songs that were never even presented to the people at the auditorium testing. These were not songs written and sang by Jimmy Bob in Stykersville, these were huge artists at that time. George Strait, Clint Black, Randy Travis, Barbara Mandrell, KT Oslin, Restless Heart, Steve Wariner.........These artists were huge at that time (86-90), but the songs by these artists we not tested at all. Yet, Alabama Mountain Music, which is a core of any classic country went from on fire, to nill 12 weeks later.
Again, local decisions or prejudices. The first thing a PD who does testing needs to remember is that their personal tastes have nothing to do with the process. Test as many possible songs as can be included, and the listeners will cull out the duds for you.
I am not a fan of music testing at all, it's killed the industry, along with horrible consultants, research, etc.
All music testing does is give you a broad picture of what listeners like and dislike. Inside a station, we loose perspective because we hear all the songs way too often and one PD is simply one person, not the whole audience.
These are the same people who said HD Radio was gonna be the biggest thing ever.
Some did. Most of us realized that it was not going to work with no home radios, no portables, and limited new car options.
Yet some of us came up with ways to monetize the services, such as foreign language formats leased to people anxious to serve immigrant groups like Persians, Armenians, Russians and those from India, China, Vietnam and other Asian nations.
These are the same people who still thing the magic key is 3 breaks an hour, :20, :40, :50, because if you miss that top of the hour music sweep, your damned for life.
In PPM markets, we either place the breaks at :00 and :30 or :15 and :45. You are talking about diary markets, and those "middle of the quarter hour" breaks have been proven by many of us reviewing millions of diaries over the years and seeing when people listened.
I have said this before, Nielsen is the only metric we have as an industry for measurement, but as God it my witness, I just looked at a diary last month that gave WSPQ is Springville all there quarter hours, and raved about them. The station has not been on the air in what, 5 years????????? That doesn't sound like the type of scientific research that's gonna cure cancer.
Betcha' the listener was in their 70's or beyond. I used to see an occasional similar instance in my 40 years of reviewing diaries and I found mentions of morning show hosts who had died a decade or more ago and even non-Hispanics listening to a Spanish language station that had not been in English for 15 years.
We even joked that "every 80-year-old in Chicago things everything they listen to is WGN".
The testing, the consulting, the research, the metrics like Nielsen......it really is all BullS*IT . (I have to put an asterisk because nobody would be able to figure out the word I said)
My best example, which I mentioned before, was my first music test in the mid-70's. The station I joined was the lowest rated FM in a market with 116 stations in the survey area. We were playing way too many songs. Knowing the format, I decided to score the first 100 songs myself, before the test. 20 or so songs I thought were great tested as stiffs. I was off by more than 20% on half the songs. We did the test, implemented, cut the playlist and jumped to #1 in one book... and we had twice the share of the #2 station. We tested regularly, and the result was 22 years at #1 despite many challenges.
It's all a money grab folks.. Do I love the rating when my station does great? Of course I do. Do I hate them when they are down? Of course I do.....but whatever they are, deep down, I know it's all hot, steaming BullS*IT. ( There's that asterisk again, just to keep everyone on their toes.)
To quote again what Owen Charlebois told me once in Columbia: we have three kinds of clients at Arbitron. There are those who went up who know they are programming geniuses. There are those who stay the same, who don't say anything, and those who went down who know that ratings are rigged and inaccurate.