M
micman
Guest
The story is starting to spread on the Net.
http://radioequalizer.blogspot.com/2007/03/talk-radio-remote-broadcasts.html
http://radioequalizer.blogspot.com/2007/03/talk-radio-remote-broadcasts.html
Legend City said:My bad on the hour difference, by the time I caught it, it was too late...
(so I thought I could get away with it, but no! you caught me!)
LOL
Class, please open your ratings books to trend Mar 07, now it's time to learn how to read a ratings book. Rule number one, higher numbers are better, they indicate that more people are listening in a given time as compared with stations with LOWER numbers. Anyone may attempt to spin the following, however in the latest trends KFYI beats KTAR in 12+ and 25-54m 6a-8a (weekdays) PERIOD. In 12+ KFYI wins, in 25-54m it's by about a 2-1 margin. I wish I could post the numbers, or a screen shot for you just to demonstrate. Oh well.advertisingguy said:I work in sales at a radio station other than the two you guys are all arguing about. I just looked up the numbers. You're all wrong. Here's the truth. KFYI beats KTAR in 12+ and 25-54 M-Su 6a-midnight. KTAR beats KFYI in 12+ and 25-54 in AMD, PMD, Eve, and SaSu. KFYI kills KTAR in 10a-3p in all demos. KTAR has a much higher 12+ and 25-54 total persons listening than KFYI in all dayparts. KFYI has a much higher time spent listening 12+ and 25-54 than KTAR.
Bottom line, KFYI is winning in AQH overall and the lead is all coming from 10a-3p. It is true they are trailing KTAR in every other daypart in AQH. I've never really looked at all these numbers this closely. This does look like a dogfight like KNIX and KMLE.
Sigh: When I quoted 6-8am I was quoting from the book, the trends are 6-10a, and that is where KFYI dominates. As it does in most dayparts, save nights.advertisingguy said:Like I've said before I don't have a dog in this fight. But you guys should tell the truth.
KMGX is wrong when he quotes the trend numbers for 6am-8am. Trends only show standard Arbitron day parts. You can only see 6-10am or 10am-3pm, etc in trends. You can not see 6am-8am in a trend. Like I said before, KFYI and KTAR can both claim success in the numbers. The real winner in ratings these days is KHOT - spanish music.
If someone tunes by a station, but doesn't stick around to listen, then that says something about the content. KFYI is able to charge a higher compensatory ad rate simply because their AQH is significantly greater than KTAR in key demos during key day-parts in both the trends and in full books.advertisingguy said:I don't know when KTAR started having both numbers but I don't think it was in the spring and summer and those numbers show KTAR beating KFYI in 12+ total persons listening and 25-54 total persons listening. Isn't that when KTAR only had an AM station?
My expertise is in what advertisers prefer and quite honestly, you're out of your league here. Your ratings numbers are wrong and now your advertising information is incorrect. Big legendary stations like KTAR always win that contest. I don't know access to the numbers right now, but if you look up KTAR and KFYI so far this year you will see that KTAR is drawing in more ad dollars than any other Phoenix radio station. That should tell you all you need to know about which station advertisers prefer.
When you mention the next book I do agree with you there. I think it will take KTAR a while to recover from the Phoenix Suns no longer on KTAR. I would expect their ratings to be down in the next few Arbitron ratings periods.
Legend City said:And, another KFYI host does a show out of ****** and no one seems to care. (because no one listens to that show)
KMGX said:I decided to give a call to someone I know in advertising in a similar market size comparative to Phoenix. I asked if advertisers prefer higher "tune-in" or cume numbers versus the preference of longer lasting, loyal listeners (higher AQH) data. He indicated that some advertisers really don't care and it's all about what numbers you decide to quote. As they say, there's lies, damn lies and then statistics. However, he also indicated that in his THIRTY years of experience, the AQH carries far more weight in the industry and with advertisers than does a boastful claim of someone passing by the station and listening for 3 minutes then tuning out when the stop set begins. Again, I'd be more than happy to post specific data, just can't do it here unfortunately.
advertisingguy said:Like I've said before I don't have a dog in this fight. But you guys should tell the truth.
KMGX is wrong when he quotes the trend numbers for 6am-8am. Trends only show standard Arbitron day parts. You can only see 6-10am or 10am-3pm, etc in trends. You can not see 6am-8am in a trend. Like I said before, KFYI and KTAR can both claim success in the numbers. The real winner in ratings these days is KHOT - spanish music.
micman said:The story is starting to spread on the Net.
http://radioequalizer.blogspot.com/2007/03/talk-radio-remote-broadcasts.html
KMGX said:You see, it used to be that KTAR beat KFYI in almost every book, quarter after quarter, trend after trend, year after year. Now, everyone has to come up with creative spin to show KTAR is still ahead, wonder why that is... it couldn't be that the mighty hermitage talker got complacent and decided that toaster-talk was better than trying to be competitive could it? Just like the American automobile industry, In 1965 you wouldn't dream of buying a foreign car, but in 2007, the quality and affordibility of MOST foreign vehicles is preferred. In 1985, KTAR was king, Pat McBland had a vacuum cleaner salesman on the air discussing various types of vacuums, new vacuum technology and how to buy a good vacuum (absolutely true by the way), and another talk station decided there was a better way of entertaining the audience, now in 2007, McBland is still talking to insurance salesmen, doctors and travel agents on the air, while KFYI tackles more substantive issues--anything is more substantive by comparison. Bottom line, the market has become very competitive and it's quite clear how much it has become that way when people have to spin the statistics in such a way. "Well, the Suns lost by 5 last night, but they dominated the offensive rebounds". Great.