atlantaboy said:(2)Power ratios, again, use straight billing, not profit - so stations like WRFF and KTCL with a large market share and lower advertising/staffing expenses come off with lower power ratios, despite the fact that they are extremely profitable, most likely more profitable than many lower share stations with lower power ratios
Expenses of any sort have nothing to do with power ratios.
Why do you always bring up "advertising" expenses? This is not the most significant or even the deciding expense item at radio stations.
Having higher ratings doesn't mean you have more expenses, so I don't see any direct link between power ratios and the amount of profit a station produces - many times, it might be inversely related
Ratings determines rate. Higher ratings in sales friendly demos can pull higher rates, and almost always do.
Format and management determine how many buys a station gets on. That is independent of size of audience.
Some formats deliver audiences that are more avidly sought by advertisers. Sports stations deliver 25-44 and 25-54 men with little spillage... which is why sometimes agency clients only buy sports to reach men. It worked for decades for Gillette...
Smaller stations in terms of rating don't get on many agency buys. In some smaller markets, an agency will only buy a few stations deep against the target. In larger markets, they may buy 10 or 12 deep.
I assume that power ratios are used by BIA/Kelsey to measure how well a station is billing, given its audience popularity
It's just a metric to help understand stations, formats and markets.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but if WRFF or KTCL had mediocre audience shares, but spend more money on sales promotion, they would come off with high power ratios
Sales promotion, as mentioned, is stuff like sales literature, a sales-only client access website, pens with the station logo, ads in trade publications or local business publications, etc. They are a tiny, tiny part of trying to increase gross sales. Many stations spend next to nothing on the category.
...most sources confirm that the large growth in the popularity of the Alternative format has been very recent, very likely the past six months or less
It's been since January (the preceding book, the Holiday book, is universally ignored) and mostly in the last 3 to 4 months / books.
the financial data you have access to is for the fiscal year 2012, so any recent positive trends in the format wouldn't show up with BIA/Kelsey until the end of 2013
Actually, we will not have full year data until well into 2014. The year has to end, and then analysis of the market data begins.
Again, I'm not sure you are aware of the dramatic changes the format has gone through in the last couple years,
Just look at the Arbitron American Radio Today I gave the link to and data for. Alternative national shares were moving down for 5 consecutive years; last year the downtrend flattened but it was still off by a bit over 20% from 6 years before.
The recent few months do not make up for the total losses of 5 years, although the format is obviously in less peril than once thought.
I've skipped the part about iTunes and artists and such, as that has no impact whatsoever on the time buying function.
Wild in Atlanta didn't have ratings much lower than Now in NYC - flipping to Alternative was clearly an investment, and one that is strongly paying off for them
But Wild was billing less than $2 million a year, and had about zero possibility of having positive cash flow. Nothing to lose. Now is undoubtedly profitable, with significant cash flow. There is no way to compare the situations.
And the Atlanta station, after just a few months, is not monetizing the very short term ratings gains. It takes 6 months to a year to start getting on most agency buys, because agencies use multi-book averages. They do this precisely to eliminate "flash in the pan" ratings gains, seasonal influences, Arbitron wobbles, etc.
- you can't compare straight billing numbers, obviously, since Now is in a market 3, 4, or 5 times the size of most others - it is still greatly underpeforming in ratings, and all indications are IMO that other formats on that frequency could be billing much higher
Now is profitable. There may be ways to improve, over time, the ratings. There is incentive to keep Z-100 down, for the benefit of the rest of the CBS cluster. The costs of killing a cash flowing station are so great that it does not usually make sense to do it.