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oldrover
Guest
In looking at Boston numbers, how many people does each rating point translate into... i.e., if Station X has a 5.0 rating, how many actual listeners does that represent?
oldrover said:In looking at Boston numbers, how many people does each rating point translate into... i.e., if Station X has a 5.0 rating, how many actual listeners does that represent?
jane grant said:the rating system is obsolete. you can't trust the numbers. It is absurd to think that a handful of people writing in a book they might get $1.00 for represent 3-4 million people.
argytunes said:...not everybody who receives one is willing to fill all (or even a portion) of it out! :![]()
argytunes said:With so many choices (both from satellite and local radio stations), it amazes me that there are still a few GM's, PD's, SM's and AE's who still believe that most of us listen to one particular radio station!
argytunes said:Some of the speciality formats, big band, classical, jazz, etc....have people who are much more likely to stay on one station all the time
And yet...don't you find it interesting how few radio station pd's want to "try something different" when it comes to a format alteration or (at the very least) tweaking up the music?
argytunes said:And yet...don't you find it interesting how few radio station pd's want to "try something different" when it comes to a format alteration or (at the very least) tweaking up the music?
3.) Do you have a better system? If it was so obsolete, advertisers wouldn't embrace it. Right now it's the best system we have. And if you want to be sucessful in radio, you will have to accept that.
argytunes said:Then again...not everybody is cut out to be a Program Director! Especially if they're convinced that the only thing that's important is handling the 'administrative chores' and contributing a sweeper liner or two? So if a broadcaster assumes this type of position...."creativity" or "creative programming" doesn't count for much of anything, does it?