In response to the previous post from TheBigA, I’d like to expand on his comments as well as add to them.
When Roby Yonge made his infamous comments, it was late 1969. FM was being programmed separately in large markets. This certainly opened job opportunities. In the NYC market, I can recall a time when the AM jocks did a separate show on an FM sister. As everyone knows, the early days of FM had limited billing and the cost of a full roster of jocks was probably out of the question. In time, that all changed.
You said “Atlanta is not that far away, and there are a lot of radio and TV opportunities there. Why? Because there are a lot of big advertisers there. Money drives hiring.” Interesting on a couple of levels. I’ve seen formats launched and it seems to take forever for talent to be placed, if it even comes to that.
I’ve given “money driving hiring” a second look. Conservative approaches to hiring on-air personalities is a strategy I see a good deal of in middle markets such as Jax. There have been a number of adult oriented formats come on the scene. Perhaps there were signal limitations. Perhaps, a track record with ratings and revenue needed to be established. Perhaps, talent hiring on certain formats has not been immediate because it was a way of mitigating risk. This is a double-edge sword in my view.
In the past, as more of a general rule, a new format would launch and from Day One, a full roster of jocks were on board adding life to the format. In fact, many of these debuts were a pretty big event. There were 10,000 or more songs in a row played and days without commercials. No doubt, that station was operating in the red at the start but there was a willingness to make those investments to increase the odds at getting recognition and immediate positive listener impressions. Payback would come later. Well, at least that was the plan! In my view, it helped give that new station a fighting chance. I see many advantages in executing that way but that's not always the norm in a market the size of Jax.
In Jacksonville, there’s been a shift away from what I described above, especially among older adult oriented formats. What determines a formats long-range success is comprised of many things. Having talent on board from the get-go is one spoke in the wheel. We’ve seen a great number of adult oriented formats fail in Jacksonville. It’s easy to say there’s demographics at play or too much competition in upper 25-54 but these are excuses. There are many factors. A big one is senior management support or sometimes it's the lack of support.
The constant I noticed was many of these formats started out pretty well. Listeners were looking for something different and that’s the norm. However, without people in place, that interest waned. By time a team or even a couple of individuals came on the air. It proved, over time, to be too late. Yes, talent is only one factor. I may talk about this further later.
The big recent news was the tax cut/tax reform that passed Congress. Trust me, I’m not trying to be sarcastic here. But, with the extra money corporations and small businesses will add to their bottom lines, will we see more hiring? Can more radio opportunities become reality for the industry?
I realize corporations and all business don’t only look at personnel when they are budgeting for expenses or investments. There could be technology investments or even paying down more debt as I think of iHeart Media.
Whether Jacksonville radio or business in general hires more people will remain to be seen. A great deal has to do with what that company business model and even the company core values. Like it or not, for many organizations, it’s about satisfying Wall Street and the owners.
The word “passion” was mentioned a number of times in the previous post with regard to those seeking a gig in radio. I couldn’t agree more. In any business, when there are people in that company who absolutely love what they do, that positive attitude is invaluable. The subject of people and their contributions to radio is very interesting one, at least to me. I'm sure there will be more on this and the role and value the right people bring to radio.
When Roby Yonge made his infamous comments, it was late 1969. FM was being programmed separately in large markets. This certainly opened job opportunities. In the NYC market, I can recall a time when the AM jocks did a separate show on an FM sister. As everyone knows, the early days of FM had limited billing and the cost of a full roster of jocks was probably out of the question. In time, that all changed.
You said “Atlanta is not that far away, and there are a lot of radio and TV opportunities there. Why? Because there are a lot of big advertisers there. Money drives hiring.” Interesting on a couple of levels. I’ve seen formats launched and it seems to take forever for talent to be placed, if it even comes to that.
I’ve given “money driving hiring” a second look. Conservative approaches to hiring on-air personalities is a strategy I see a good deal of in middle markets such as Jax. There have been a number of adult oriented formats come on the scene. Perhaps there were signal limitations. Perhaps, a track record with ratings and revenue needed to be established. Perhaps, talent hiring on certain formats has not been immediate because it was a way of mitigating risk. This is a double-edge sword in my view.
In the past, as more of a general rule, a new format would launch and from Day One, a full roster of jocks were on board adding life to the format. In fact, many of these debuts were a pretty big event. There were 10,000 or more songs in a row played and days without commercials. No doubt, that station was operating in the red at the start but there was a willingness to make those investments to increase the odds at getting recognition and immediate positive listener impressions. Payback would come later. Well, at least that was the plan! In my view, it helped give that new station a fighting chance. I see many advantages in executing that way but that's not always the norm in a market the size of Jax.
In Jacksonville, there’s been a shift away from what I described above, especially among older adult oriented formats. What determines a formats long-range success is comprised of many things. Having talent on board from the get-go is one spoke in the wheel. We’ve seen a great number of adult oriented formats fail in Jacksonville. It’s easy to say there’s demographics at play or too much competition in upper 25-54 but these are excuses. There are many factors. A big one is senior management support or sometimes it's the lack of support.
The constant I noticed was many of these formats started out pretty well. Listeners were looking for something different and that’s the norm. However, without people in place, that interest waned. By time a team or even a couple of individuals came on the air. It proved, over time, to be too late. Yes, talent is only one factor. I may talk about this further later.
The big recent news was the tax cut/tax reform that passed Congress. Trust me, I’m not trying to be sarcastic here. But, with the extra money corporations and small businesses will add to their bottom lines, will we see more hiring? Can more radio opportunities become reality for the industry?
I realize corporations and all business don’t only look at personnel when they are budgeting for expenses or investments. There could be technology investments or even paying down more debt as I think of iHeart Media.
Whether Jacksonville radio or business in general hires more people will remain to be seen. A great deal has to do with what that company business model and even the company core values. Like it or not, for many organizations, it’s about satisfying Wall Street and the owners.
The word “passion” was mentioned a number of times in the previous post with regard to those seeking a gig in radio. I couldn’t agree more. In any business, when there are people in that company who absolutely love what they do, that positive attitude is invaluable. The subject of people and their contributions to radio is very interesting one, at least to me. I'm sure there will be more on this and the role and value the right people bring to radio.
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