This is a thread worth continuing... let me share a few thoughts.
Tillery's original question had two branches: radio's future as an industry... and radio's future in Florida.
Florida is a special case because of the terrible AM signal propogation. The lousy soil really does severely limit the listenable contour of AM stations. Florida was among the first regions in the U.S. to see listening shift from AM to FM and very few AM stations have managed to buck that trend.
On the other hand, Class C spacing requirements and the unique peninsular geography has limited the sheer number of FM licenses in Florida, especially in smaller communities. Very few Class A sticks. As a result there are many sizeable communities that have no local FM service--and, unless the FCC loosens spacing requirements, never will. That may be where AM can fill a role.
There is a lot of doom and gloom hanging around radio that seems to be largely unfounded. Over the past 20 to 30 years our industry somehow came under the influence of the unrealistic Wall Street fantasy of never-ending increases: the notion that revenues should always increase, and that cash flow (operating profit) should always increase. That, of course, is stupid.
But, as a result, many of us now think that the sky is falling when, in fact, we (radio) still enjoy enormous profit margins that place us among the healthiest industries in America.
Yes, you are seeing a lot of cost-cutting and personnel layoffs--not because radio companies are actually losing money, but rather to preserve every penny of the huge profits we are generating. The handful of public companies are indeed jumping off tall buildings because of their disastrous stock price plunges. But despite their prominence, these outfits are the exception.
Again, stupid.
The Future? Radio should continue to do well for as long as any of us is alive. Cheer up!
Tillery's original question had two branches: radio's future as an industry... and radio's future in Florida.
Florida is a special case because of the terrible AM signal propogation. The lousy soil really does severely limit the listenable contour of AM stations. Florida was among the first regions in the U.S. to see listening shift from AM to FM and very few AM stations have managed to buck that trend.
On the other hand, Class C spacing requirements and the unique peninsular geography has limited the sheer number of FM licenses in Florida, especially in smaller communities. Very few Class A sticks. As a result there are many sizeable communities that have no local FM service--and, unless the FCC loosens spacing requirements, never will. That may be where AM can fill a role.
There is a lot of doom and gloom hanging around radio that seems to be largely unfounded. Over the past 20 to 30 years our industry somehow came under the influence of the unrealistic Wall Street fantasy of never-ending increases: the notion that revenues should always increase, and that cash flow (operating profit) should always increase. That, of course, is stupid.
But, as a result, many of us now think that the sky is falling when, in fact, we (radio) still enjoy enormous profit margins that place us among the healthiest industries in America.
Yes, you are seeing a lot of cost-cutting and personnel layoffs--not because radio companies are actually losing money, but rather to preserve every penny of the huge profits we are generating. The handful of public companies are indeed jumping off tall buildings because of their disastrous stock price plunges. But despite their prominence, these outfits are the exception.
Again, stupid.
The Future? Radio should continue to do well for as long as any of us is alive. Cheer up!