OK David....Let me help you:
1.) We will operate in the Public Interest as Public Trustees.
What is "the public interest" today? Is providing relaxing music during the workday less in the public interest than a talk show about the new sewage plant?
First...Operating in the Public Interest means running your Radio Station in a manner that serves the needs of Listeners ahead of Stockholders, Bean Counters, and Bonus Structures. Do that well, and the Stockholders, Bean Counters, and Bonus Structures take care of themselves.
Second....There's nothing wrong with "....providing relaxing music during the workday", as long as a Qualified, On-Air Broadcaster interrupts it when a Tornado Warning is issued, or when Terrorist Act occurs....9-Eleven for example. (David, has the New York EAS tripped to inform those enjoying "....relaxing music during the workday...." in the World Trade Center South Tower that the North Tower has been hit yet?)
Last Thing....A Talk Show about a "...new sewage plant..." is not "....a more entertaining, creative, and memorable On-Air Product than Listeners can provide for themselves elsewhere....", unless it has just exploded. It is therefore not a cogent justification for an editorial decision to completely ignore anything that is not: "....providing relaxing music during the workday....". That you would even cite that example belies a programming weakness in you that should always be remembered when someone reads your commentaries.
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2.) We will focus our Product on our true customers; Listeners.
With the important exception of the horrible facilities, like high-band daytimers, that can not compete, radio stations have to focus on listeners as without a listener group, advertising sales over anything but the very short term is impossible.
(Assuming that it's even possible to make heads or tails out of that statement....)
The current pervasive trend in Radio is to base Radio's main effort on Advertising Sales, to the exclusion of providing a Quality On-Air Product. Your (apparent) assertion that this is short-term is therefore correct.
As many have said, "...A rising tide lifts all boats...". Likewise, an ebbing tide lowers them. If a few large Radio Corporations act to lower the tide based on an inherent inability to afford a Quality On-Air Product, the Listeners are thus forced to either accept this lack of quality....
....OR FIND SOMETHING BETTER! ("....Network Programming, I-Pods, Multi-changer CD Players, and Satellite "Radio" Channels....")
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3.) We will find and hire real Program Directors, charge them with the mission of delivering a more entertaining, creative, and memorable On-Air Product, than Listeners can provide for themselves elsewhere.
In today's multimedia world, radio can only be a mass medium. At certain times, listeners will want to custom tailor entertainment to their own taste... just like when we played 45's over and over. And at other times, radio's convenience is an important advantage.
Your comment has nothing to do with the subject of the quote. It's almost as if you have a blindness to the concept of "....real Program Directors, charg[ed]....with the mission of delivering a more entertaining, creative, and memorable On-Air Product than Listeners can provide for themselves elsewhere....". But then, that's not really a surprise, is it?
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4.) We will provide these real Program Directors the tools they need, hold them accountable for the results we seek, and then leave them alone.
Unless you insert "in accordance with the economic ability of each market to sustain" in there, this is a wild dream. Radio, to sustain any programming, must be able to pay for the costs. Many stations have failed in the creation of programming that was too expensive for the market to sustain.
Re-read, David: "....We will provide these real Program Directors the tools they need....".
And yes, Radio is expensive....If any Radio Corporation, regardless of its size, cannot afford to provide themselves with real Program Directors possessing the tools they need to succeed, they should reduce their holdings to the limits of their finances, instead of the limits of their financing. You know, like manyTop Ten Radio Personalities do right now.
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5.) We will watch as these real Program Directors find, hire, and direct On-Air Personalities who are more entertaining, creative, and memorable than Network Programming, I-Pods, Multi-changer CD Players, and Satellite "Radio" Channels.
Problem: not all listeners want "personalities." Some find all so-called "personalities" to be grating and annoying. That is why stations discover alternatives that deemphasize personalites and are successful with them... and that is in the public interest, isn't it?
There is not one Radio Programming solution, David....Although most Music Programmed stations, like Jack, try to prove that everyday.
Again, you diminish Talent to a level I'm not discussing, so your argument has some seeming relevence....
I said "....find, hire, and direct On-Air Personalities who are more entertaining, creative, and memorable than Network Programming, I-Pods, Multi-changer CD Players, and Satellite "Radio" Channels....". As your blindness cannot see someone like that, your mind cannot conceive that reality.
(This is truly like boxing with a blind man, is it not?)
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6.) We will provide these Personalities with the tools, support, and paychecks commensurate with what is necessary for them to own homes, raise children, dress well, drive nice cars, and save money for their futures.
You should design rides for Disney's "Fantasyland." Businesses will pay no more than is required to accomplish the tasks at hand. How many Americans play football? How many play in the NFL and make $10 million a year. The rest are subject to what is generally explained by an excess of supply over demand.
OK, now re-read what YOU just said....Even the idea that Radio Personalities should have the tools, support, and paychecks commensurate with what is necessary for them to own homes, raise children, dress well, drive nice cars, and save money for their futures....
....Is FANTASYLAND!!
Again, everything I have said is true. You are an apologist for Radio's present. David, yours is not a working model for Radio's FUTURE!
By the way, the NFL League Player minimum for 2010 is $325,000.00. The XFL League Player maximum was $45,000.00. Which league is still in business?
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7.) We will fire these Personalities, within minutes of them embarrassing our Listeners, our Communities, or our Company, On-Air, or Off.
We are to empower on air staff, and then expect that they never make a mistake? Save for egregious errors of judgement and things that are illegal, recognizing mistakes, appologizing and moving on is far more fair. And, within today's labor laws and rules, instant firing is freqently not legal.
When was the last time an honest mistake embarrassed anyone other than themselves? Besides, you have no problem firing Personalities, legally or not. It just have to be because you can't afford to have them.
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8.) We will hire Advertising Sales Professionals who advocate for their Clients, and who want to sell our Product, not tinker with it.
You must have worked at a couple of bad stations and now assume that nobody in the business is professional. As high a percentage of sellers that I have met are as honest, ethical and professional as, let's say, dentists I have met.
You're making the assumptions pal, not me. For a supposed professional communicator, youo sure don't get much of what you read, huh?
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9.) We will direct our Sales efforts to as few Advertisers as necessary to meet our financial goals, while simultaneously meeting their expectations of results.
Rates are set not just by the radio competitive environment but by the sum of all ad media. In a bad economy, rates fall because there is more supply than demand... no matter what we want to sell for.
And radio is a medium. The success of a campaign is about more than delivering a message... location, need, price, competition, etc. are part of the issues involved here. Radio has little or no control over most of these matters.
No David, your brand of Radio is what is out of control....Like a golfer who ignores the Rules. What is he or she actually doing?
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10.) Our decision-making will always result in a stronger On-Air Product, not a weaker one.
Most broadcasters already do that. The first decisions in this business, as in any business, relate to the survival of the enterprise. Since radio did not create the recession, then we are subject to its pressures.
Yes David, Radio Broadcasters do indeed, do that....However, they are the scarce minority running Radio these days. However, Radio Managers, the vast majority, running the industry today do not.
By the way, properly-run Radio is recession proof....Radio was one of the only industries that profited during the Depression.
Recalibrate David....Remember, it's impossible to fill an overflowing cup.
Jon-David Wells
The Wells Report