Let me start by saying that I've seen research supporting the use of pre-roll ads. But the stats might not tell the whole story. Here are three downsides:
1) Pre-roll ads are annoying. Listeners want to get right the programming. After a few tune-ins they'll catch on that the pre-rolls are blocking it. That might not put them in the right mood to embrace what's being advertised.
2) Pre-roll ads impede programming "discovery." They make channel-surfing slow and annoying. Internet streaming should be a good user experience and fun to use.
3) More and more radio streams have started to use pre-roll ads. Here's another negative I found recently. I was mowing my lawn the other day while listening to a station with pre-roll ads on my phone through Bluetooh earbuds. Every time I reached the end of a row and turned around, a pre-roll ad interrupted the programming. Turns out my phone was switching between the 2.4GHz and 5GHz channels of my mesh router. With a normal stream that causes an almost unnoticeable glitch, as I confirmed by switching to a station without pre-rolls. But the interruption is enough to trigger pre-rolls. There are many other causes of momentary dropouts. My solution is to avoid stations with pre-rolls.
Sometimes too much tweaking of the bottom line can cause reaching a point of diminishing returns due to unintended consequences. This may be a good example.
1) Pre-roll ads are annoying. Listeners want to get right the programming. After a few tune-ins they'll catch on that the pre-rolls are blocking it. That might not put them in the right mood to embrace what's being advertised.
2) Pre-roll ads impede programming "discovery." They make channel-surfing slow and annoying. Internet streaming should be a good user experience and fun to use.
3) More and more radio streams have started to use pre-roll ads. Here's another negative I found recently. I was mowing my lawn the other day while listening to a station with pre-roll ads on my phone through Bluetooh earbuds. Every time I reached the end of a row and turned around, a pre-roll ad interrupted the programming. Turns out my phone was switching between the 2.4GHz and 5GHz channels of my mesh router. With a normal stream that causes an almost unnoticeable glitch, as I confirmed by switching to a station without pre-rolls. But the interruption is enough to trigger pre-rolls. There are many other causes of momentary dropouts. My solution is to avoid stations with pre-rolls.
Sometimes too much tweaking of the bottom line can cause reaching a point of diminishing returns due to unintended consequences. This may be a good example.