1
1290wgli
Guest
Re: How media is bought
> You really think that the people at P&G are idiots?
When it comes to radio ad buying, if that is where they are directing the agencies, yes.
> The US now has a service based economy. So most Americans,
> per your criteria, are pawns. I´d add an "r" as, at least,
> prawns are edible and deliciousl with lemon.
Yes. Most are just doing the bidding of others with little or no possibility to change the system. Fact of life, corporate America is America and the country ebbs and flows with its whims. The machine is too large.
> No indication in the PPM tests that they are leaving in
> significant numbers. The fact is, advertisers know that a
> big percentage of advertising is not heard, seen or read,
> and that is factored in.
Funny, I recall an article in one of the trades a few years back where one of the points was pondering that same question: "What's it like to be spot 3 in a 5 spot set". The author didn't even want to "open that can of worms". Wish I could remember, but it was either BE or Radio World.
> Actually, I have been wanting to retire for about 5 years,
> but am enjoying radio too much to stop.
Well, I have another 20 and would like it to still be there at the end.
> Radio is measured at the respondent level, not by household.
> TV is measured by household.
It's hard to figure how you come up with some of these numbers, so I was wondering how it was being spun. I figured it was not by sets in US households.
> Nearly half of those who could lsiten to us do.
But that number breaks down even further when you consider that your "marketable share" includes less people than the 12+ numbers.
> > Why doesn't it exist?
>
> Because, as I have said, advertisers do not put money
> against 55+ in electroinc media.
In that case, what's left for radio? You can't give me a clean bill of health for aradio when it does not cater to future listeners and ignores those with radio listening habits, while saturating one or two specific demos with 3 dozen rows of presets to "tune out" your clients' message.
>> Well, they were supposed to have the 4th Q 2004, then Jan
>> 2005, then by Christmas 2005, now by when?
> I don´t know who told you that.
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2003-05/ns-arr052803.php
Here is Kenwood's line
"Kenwood plans to make a big splash at the CES show in January with its 2004 HD Radios and to be able to ship significant quantities of product that month. Kenwood also plans to introduce a home version in the first quarter of 2004."
I don't think Kenwood has the home receiver. I give them credit for the auto line, but who is promoting it? Getting stations on the air is important, getting consumers to under stand that "Digital Radio" does not mean the Phase Locked Loop radio they already own is another.
Two years later, the same song
http://www.billboardradiomonitor.co...display.jsp?schema=&vnu_content_id=1001390949
Quote: "In other words, HD radio missed the holiday buying season".
Here is one model promised for June 2005 (the cheapest home unit available)
http://www.ibiquity.com/press/pr/Radiosophy_041905.htm
But here in a blog from the 2006 CEA show:
"Radiosophy's radio is still a couple months away from release, and appeared only at iBiquity's booth".
From fybush.com 9/26/05
"HD Radio was the big topic on many attendees' minds, though with plenty of concern about what remains a **much slower than expected** rollout of receivers for the service. (Only Day Sequerra, which makes extremely sophisticated and pricey reference receivers, had tuners on the floor ready for shipping; Radiosophy was on hand to demonstrate its slick home tuner, but shipping of the unit remains delayed, likely past the holiday season that should have been a major rollout for HD Radio gear if the technology is going to catch on before it's completely eclipsed by satellite and other digital technologies.)"
And while these are just a few examples, the fact is that only Kenwood is agressive rolling out receivers. Yamaha has one for $1800 (home unit... very affordable) and the Boston Acoustics radio has arrived, but who is spending $500 for an AM FM Radio who doesn't hold a ham ticket or is an audiophile (and I use THAT term loosely for BA's table radios).
> No, the system has been in development since the early 90's.
> The codec was not even finalized until last year, and the
> design specs for radios and chips not releasted until
> November.
Project Acorn in 1989 actually. And that doesn't matter, in field devices are upgradeable
"Vice President of Kenwood USA Bob Law said the codec change has required only software changes in receivers, not modifications in hardware."
> They seem to. A comparable phenomenon can be seen among
> Hispanics of second generation who spek mostly English while
> in school... but when they marry or get job responsibility
> they use Spanish more and tend to become more Spanish
> speaking over time, and this is called "cultural reversion."
> The same happens with alternative media usage... as people
> fill their life with family and job, they use more easy to
> use media
Wifi cell internet will provide more than enough specific content to render radio useless. Why wait for some consultant to GIVE me the conent I crave when I can have it with me when I want it.. including traffic, sports, weather and news from any political angle I want.
P.S. As I write this, WDRC in Hartford just ran a liner at 1:45am touting their new "crisp, clean sound of HD Radio". Station has had HD on for 3 months, first mention I have heard, but no OTHER info to consumers who may want to know WHERE to buy, or what the hell it even is.
Since DRC is an oldies station, it may be time to try and find one, since the music I love will probably end up on one of the secondary streams soon (oh, wait, I live too far out of the service contour to probably decode any secondary channels).
> You really think that the people at P&G are idiots?
When it comes to radio ad buying, if that is where they are directing the agencies, yes.
> The US now has a service based economy. So most Americans,
> per your criteria, are pawns. I´d add an "r" as, at least,
> prawns are edible and deliciousl with lemon.
Yes. Most are just doing the bidding of others with little or no possibility to change the system. Fact of life, corporate America is America and the country ebbs and flows with its whims. The machine is too large.
> No indication in the PPM tests that they are leaving in
> significant numbers. The fact is, advertisers know that a
> big percentage of advertising is not heard, seen or read,
> and that is factored in.
Funny, I recall an article in one of the trades a few years back where one of the points was pondering that same question: "What's it like to be spot 3 in a 5 spot set". The author didn't even want to "open that can of worms". Wish I could remember, but it was either BE or Radio World.
> Actually, I have been wanting to retire for about 5 years,
> but am enjoying radio too much to stop.
Well, I have another 20 and would like it to still be there at the end.
> Radio is measured at the respondent level, not by household.
> TV is measured by household.
It's hard to figure how you come up with some of these numbers, so I was wondering how it was being spun. I figured it was not by sets in US households.
> Nearly half of those who could lsiten to us do.
But that number breaks down even further when you consider that your "marketable share" includes less people than the 12+ numbers.
> > Why doesn't it exist?
>
> Because, as I have said, advertisers do not put money
> against 55+ in electroinc media.
In that case, what's left for radio? You can't give me a clean bill of health for aradio when it does not cater to future listeners and ignores those with radio listening habits, while saturating one or two specific demos with 3 dozen rows of presets to "tune out" your clients' message.
>> Well, they were supposed to have the 4th Q 2004, then Jan
>> 2005, then by Christmas 2005, now by when?
> I don´t know who told you that.
http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2003-05/ns-arr052803.php
Here is Kenwood's line
"Kenwood plans to make a big splash at the CES show in January with its 2004 HD Radios and to be able to ship significant quantities of product that month. Kenwood also plans to introduce a home version in the first quarter of 2004."
I don't think Kenwood has the home receiver. I give them credit for the auto line, but who is promoting it? Getting stations on the air is important, getting consumers to under stand that "Digital Radio" does not mean the Phase Locked Loop radio they already own is another.
Two years later, the same song
http://www.billboardradiomonitor.co...display.jsp?schema=&vnu_content_id=1001390949
Quote: "In other words, HD radio missed the holiday buying season".
Here is one model promised for June 2005 (the cheapest home unit available)
http://www.ibiquity.com/press/pr/Radiosophy_041905.htm
But here in a blog from the 2006 CEA show:
"Radiosophy's radio is still a couple months away from release, and appeared only at iBiquity's booth".
From fybush.com 9/26/05
"HD Radio was the big topic on many attendees' minds, though with plenty of concern about what remains a **much slower than expected** rollout of receivers for the service. (Only Day Sequerra, which makes extremely sophisticated and pricey reference receivers, had tuners on the floor ready for shipping; Radiosophy was on hand to demonstrate its slick home tuner, but shipping of the unit remains delayed, likely past the holiday season that should have been a major rollout for HD Radio gear if the technology is going to catch on before it's completely eclipsed by satellite and other digital technologies.)"
And while these are just a few examples, the fact is that only Kenwood is agressive rolling out receivers. Yamaha has one for $1800 (home unit... very affordable) and the Boston Acoustics radio has arrived, but who is spending $500 for an AM FM Radio who doesn't hold a ham ticket or is an audiophile (and I use THAT term loosely for BA's table radios).
> No, the system has been in development since the early 90's.
> The codec was not even finalized until last year, and the
> design specs for radios and chips not releasted until
> November.
Project Acorn in 1989 actually. And that doesn't matter, in field devices are upgradeable
"Vice President of Kenwood USA Bob Law said the codec change has required only software changes in receivers, not modifications in hardware."
> They seem to. A comparable phenomenon can be seen among
> Hispanics of second generation who spek mostly English while
> in school... but when they marry or get job responsibility
> they use Spanish more and tend to become more Spanish
> speaking over time, and this is called "cultural reversion."
> The same happens with alternative media usage... as people
> fill their life with family and job, they use more easy to
> use media
Wifi cell internet will provide more than enough specific content to render radio useless. Why wait for some consultant to GIVE me the conent I crave when I can have it with me when I want it.. including traffic, sports, weather and news from any political angle I want.
P.S. As I write this, WDRC in Hartford just ran a liner at 1:45am touting their new "crisp, clean sound of HD Radio". Station has had HD on for 3 months, first mention I have heard, but no OTHER info to consumers who may want to know WHERE to buy, or what the hell it even is.
Since DRC is an oldies station, it may be time to try and find one, since the music I love will probably end up on one of the secondary streams soon (oh, wait, I live too far out of the service contour to probably decode any secondary channels).