^^^ This. I don't question the sound science behind these tests, but anyone -- regardless of industry, not just radio -- can get the result they 'want' if they pay attention to how the room is populated, which will "validate" the views of those who commission the survey. (How do you think Ken Jennings had 70-someodd consecutive days of runaway victories on "Jeopardy!"? He's smart, but was he THAT smart? The game wasn't fixed, but they almost had to have given him opponents pulled from the "Wheel of Fortune" contestant line. The producers got the blockbuster ratings they wanted, and the game was still played on the level.)
I'm 50, which means no major commercial station gives a flying something-or-other what I think. But I still have opinions, and a big one is there's a sensible middle ground between playing ONLY kajillion-seller hits that spent as many weeks at the top as "You Light Up My Life" ... and loading down a playlist with middling-charters and obscure stiffs. There's room for spice -- on occasion, throw in that Dan Hill tune, or another which - gasp! - might've peaked only at #10. It meant stations once played it in a high rotation. People once bought the record. Play it, and you get that "oh wow" factor without the baggage. If the listener doesn't like it, it's only four minutes, give or take; it's not as if the P1 lurves every single song on the 25-deep playlist, anyway.
Where does 40-year-old Tiffany go if she detests "Up Where We Belong" or "Hey Soul Sister"? And she comes back to her favorite station, doesn't she? The same would apply to a top ten "obscure stiff" by Dan Hill. One of four things would happen:
1) "Wowowow .... I've forgotten ALL about this song!! I haven't heard this since I was a high school junior. Is this on iTunes??"
2) "I've never heard this. I kinda like it. Is this on iTunes?"
3) "I've never heard this, and I don't like it" ... grits her teeth and waits out the four minutes until the next song.
4) "I've never heard this, and I don't like it" ... and changes the station. But she'll be back. Where else would she go? She's a radio listener. If she wanted Pandora or iTunes, she'd have already jumped off the FM grid for good ... you know, like many "geeks" who like big playlists and obscure songs, and aren't blessed enough to live in a market with a quirky, non-commercial music station catering to those tastes.
Just a couple of old pennies from a newly-minted curmudgeon.
--Russell