In about two or three more posts.... this thread may end up in the Hot Talk forum. 
What is wrong with this picture (or why radio is dying). I was listening to a 'classic rock' station for about an hour while working in the garden. During that time there were two seven minute stop sets. With mostly the same commercials in both. The voice tracked announcer plugged the 'win free tickets to .. in 15 minutes' between each song. And then had the Lasik doctor who did his Lasik surgery on for not one but two 5 minute 'interviews' (or plugs, and I suppose there ought to be a disclaimer in there). When I got a chance to get my gardening gloves off, I put on an MP3 CD and never looked back. That is why radio is dying.
Sounds like that station is making plenty of money. Which is the point.
I disagree. Broadcasters should know that long stopsets are killers on music radio (and the younger the demo the worse it is) therefore it would behoove the suits to reduce the number and length of their stopsets and play more music.
That may be your experience, but it's not what the statistics say.
Radio stations are not in the music distribution business. Playing more music and fewer commercials is not the way the game is played. There is a cost for the service you enjoy, and that cost is measured in commercials. If you don't want to pay, that's fine, but expect that your favorite format will disappear. Which, in your case, it has.
As we've discussed in another thread, radio stations are looking for other ways to monetize their audience. Those that use the alternative systems may be able to lessen their commercial load. But to get back to the subject line of this thread, the quickest way to kill radio, or any other business, is to prevent it from making money. When a station has no income, it truly is dead.
You didn't quote any statistics.
Of course, we all know that is just an excuse because other advertising venues have found a way to address us old timers - look at all the subnets existing on TV airing classic shows and advertising directly to old farts. That's where your radio advertising dollars have gone.
What I see is the stations not making money (whatever the reason) are selling off or just shutting down. The ones being sold are changing into formats which have other means of sustenance rather than commercial advertising. Some flip to niche programming. A very few are being run by people with deep pockets and a desire to run a radio station. And those are not my personal observations as much as they are the observations written in these boards day after day by people who are/were in the business.
I continue to maintain that the fastest way for a previously successful music radio station to fail is to lessen its appeal to its audience and the quickest way to do that is replace what its listeners want to hear with something they don't.
I know. You & I have had this discussion before, and statistics don't matter to you. You know your experience. And that's fine for you. I'm not doubting your experience. No one knows it better than you.
We've replaced the money from your demographic with money from younger people, and we're doing just fine.
The other thing we find is that statistically (there's that word again) older people have less patience for commercials than younger people. Why? Younger people have the "ignore" button. Older people don't. I'm not a psychologist, so I don't understand that. All I know is that the minute someone turns 50, they start to get annoyed by commercials. Younger people seem unaffected by them, especially if they're not aimed at them.
However, FM stations that program to people in that core 25-45 audience group are doing great. The country music format is very healthy. CHR is extremely healthy. Urban is extremely healthy. And some parts of AC are healthy. As I said, statistically, listeners seem to be willing to put up with about 12 minutes of commercials, split in two or three blocks.
Yep, I agree, and that's why it's important for radio to change and adapt as the audience ages. And I think the people that I work with are doing that. I don't speak for the entire industry. Just the square foot I occupy.
If you ask 100 random radio listeners what their primary dislike is I will bet big money the majority will say some form of commercials - either too many or too long.
That's not what other posters are saying on these boards. Personally, I don't know the finances but observation tells me there are fewer listeners these days than in years past.
I am no statistician but reviewing the ratings posted on these boards generally looks like a very few stations are getting the lion's share of listeners (and presumably the ratings and revenue that go with them) and the rest are fighting for scraps (or exist in a niche genre and can exist on scraps). Virtually all the big money DJ's are gone as are the specialty shows they used to produce. There are no significant money makers in medium or small markets and only the big cap companies are making it in the big markets.
I sincerely hope you are successful at turning it around but because I have watched it decline since the mid-80's I am pretty convinced it is a dead-end industry (and again, I am talking about popular music radio, not necessarily all formats). In any case I don't see a resurrection in my lifetime.
No one likes the cost of the things we enjoy, but that doesn't stop us from doing those things. Would people like to hear the music they like without commercials? Sure. But that's not going to happen. I spend a lot of time with record labels, and they are finding ways to suck money out of music lovers any way they can. Right now, it's indirectly through royalties on radio and streaming sites. But at some point, they will want to add a music fee to your cell phone bill. That's what I keep hearing them say.
The fact that no single format is getting the lion's share is a music issue that can be confirmed in downloads and streaming data. Musically, we've become Yugoslavia. That's just how it is. Radio owners have to program their clusters with that in mind.
As for "big money DJs," you'd be surprised how many are making 6 figure salaries, and how many are being heard in multiple markets. In some ways, this is the second Golden Age for some DJs. The big story this past year is a guy named Bobby Bones, who went from a local host in Austin to a nationally syndicated personality heard in 60 markets. Just because you don't see something doesn't mean it's not there.
It's never going to go back to the way it was. That's a reality. Radio will never have the monopoly it had in the 60s and early 70s. But this is a business. It has to make money. Yes, we know people don't like commercials, but at some point, there will be no way to avoid them other than your own personal collection. And from what I'm seeing in download statistics, the trend now is people seem to prefer the trade-off of commercially sponsored streaming over paying for and storing music.
If you want to talk about chart performance, Imagine Dragons recently had a song that lasted almost two years and another that was well over a year! I don't think that ever happened in the '60s. That's more like I once heard Bing Crosby say, about long ago songs that would take about two years to become popular and remain so for another two years.
I fully realize that commercials pay for entertainment and I don't object to that. I object to extremely long stop sets, too frequent stop sets or sets that repeat the same commercial over and over again.
And good luck to the cell companies getting me to pay for phone music. I use my cell phone as a phone only. If I want to listen to music I fire up my mp3 player.
Although the specific genres have changed it seems the same number of genres are still around.
Here in Phoenix 20 years ago we had half a dozen very well paid DJ's/personalities, all local. I can think of only one left. Some are still around but not on the radio. That's what I meant by "big name DJ's" are largely gone.
And that is the exact reason I said earlier that (music) radio is a dying industry. Not this year. Perhaps not next year. But it will happen. The financial issues coupled with the poor quality of pop music is going to kill music radio. The only thing keeping it alive now seems to be the video/stage portion. Take that away and you have a semi-popular song that has just 15 minutes of fame. I don't follow current pop music much but can't think of a single song in the past number of years that has lasted something like six months on the charts as did many of the Oldies.
And why would I want to pay for commercially streamed music as opposed to listening to my own library? That makes no sense to me. I can plug in my player as easily as a cell phone and listen to my personal favs through a high end stereo or I can ear bud it. Otherwise I have a clunky phone with data caps and drop out issues and have to pay for a subscription on top of that. ???
...the poor quality of pop music is going to kill music radio. The only thing keeping it alive now seems to be the video/stage portion. Take that away and you have a semi-popular song that has just 15 minutes of fame. I don't follow current pop music much but can't think of a single song in the past number of years that has lasted something like six months on the charts as did many of the Oldies.
If you want to talk about chart performance, Imagine Dragons recently had a song that lasted almost two years and another that was well over a year! I don't think that ever happened in the '60s.
Musical dad-ism again. Order your Jim Nabors 8-tracks now, operators are standing by.
And why would I want to pay for commercially streamed music as opposed to listening to my own library? That makes no sense to me. I can plug in my player as easily as a cell phone and listen to my personal favs through a high end stereo or I can ear bud it. Otherwise I have a clunky phone with data caps and drop out issues and have to pay for a subscription on top of that. ???
Jim Nabors had a voice that most modern singers would die for. But you knew that.
I fully realize that commercials pay for entertainment and I don't object to that. I object to extremely long stop sets, too frequent stop sets or sets that repeat the same commercial over and over again.
Here in Phoenix 20 years ago we had half a dozen very well paid DJ's/personalities, all local. I can think of only one left. Some are still around but not on the radio. That's what I meant by "big name DJ's" are largely gone.
And why would I want to pay for commercially streamed music as opposed to listening to my own library? That makes no sense to me.
Here's the choice: Two commercials in between every song, or 6 commercials every three or four songs. Which would you like? We've done hundreds of surveys, and we've found that by a huge margin, people prefer FEWER stopsets. We can do what YOU want, or what 90% of our listeners want. We choose to do what the majority wants.
I know a lot of local DJs in Phoenix. A lot of them on a lot of radio stations you don't listen to. Just because you don't listen doesn't mean they're not there.
I hate to break this to you, but we're not building our business around the habits of 70 year old white men. What you do is fine for you. Keep on doing it as long as you want. We're paying attention to what everyone else is doing. Right now, streaming is the growth area. Things are not going to stay this way forever.
You keep saying that and I keep disagreeing. I have never known anyone, with the exception of the pre-set pushers, who prefers 6 to 2. Perhaps, unmeasured, are those people who prefer 6 because they can then hit the pre-set. I cannot believe people will voluntarily sit through long stop sets.
Methinks you read that too quickly. I didn't say there weren't DJ's in Phoenix. What I said was there used to be a significant number of DJ's making the big bucks here, and most had been in the market a long time. To the best of my knowledge there is but one left on the air.
You are breaking my heart! But I have found a way to deal with my grief. Unfortunately it does not benefit radio.