I had a conversation recently with someone high up at iHeart/Atlanta. Turns out he *does* understand it.
Surprise! As I often say: "It's not a hobby."
I had a conversation recently with someone high up at iHeart/Atlanta. Turns out he *does* understand it.
I had a conversation recently with someone high up at iHeart/Atlanta. Turns out he *does* understand it. He explained the question would then become what to do with 105.3. He said he knows 105.3 couldn't compete in the Urban arena, and it's a southside/intown signal. He told me what it currently bills as Z105.3. What it bills is not in the area of the major stations, but it's quite good for that signal.
I say move Z105.3 to 105.7, move Real 96.7 to 105.3, and then flip 96.7 to either (a) a simulcast of 105.7, (b) a simulcast of AM 640, or (c) a Classic Country format.
So your solution to one low rated station is to blow up the cluster? Do you know how much money that would cost?
To suggest these moves would be cost prohibitive is ridiculous.
I disagree with the notion that the 105.7 signal is "very limited." The vast majority of the market's population lives within its predicted 65 dBu. The station earned respectable numbers as Wild 105.7. It also earned respectable numbers its first couple years with the Alternative format.
104.7, 97.1, and until recently - 95.5 - have had to deal with less than stellar metro signals. All receive good to outstanding ratings on a regular basis.
105.7 gets rotten ratings because the programming is milquetoast and because its intended audience has little use for terrestrial radio. End of story.
105.3 couldn't compete in the Urban arena?! Why not? I don't understand the logic behind that comment. I remember Hot 97.5 getting decent numbers prior to moving to 107.9, and 105.3's coverage is much better than that of 97.5! 105.3's metrowide coverage is also certainly far superior to that of OG 97.9, Streetz 94.5, and iHeart's own Real 96.7.
I say move Z105.3 to 105.7, move Real 96.7 to 105.3, and then flip 96.7 to either (a) a simulcast of 105.7, (b) a simulcast of AM 640, or (c) a Classic Country format. Heck, if iHeart is obsessed in clearing The Woody Show in Atlanta, plop the Alt format there.
Disrupting one station can cause at least two to three months worth of lost revenue. You can't begin to sell the new location until things stabilize. So you want to blow up three stations, with three very different audiences. How much of the risk would you be willing to take? There's a reason why companies don't do this kind of thing.
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There have been multiple stations in Atlanta that have changed FM dial position over the past 20 years. It's also happened in San Francisco, Denver, Salt Lake City, Cleveland, Detroit, San Diego, Las Vegas, Houston, Boston, Portland, Tampa, Greensboro, Albany, Pittsburgh, Austin, Dallas, Oklahoma City, Kansas City, and St. Louis. Are those enough examples, or do you need me to name more?![]()
I guess you believe keeping formats & signals misaligned is a smarter strategy than placing existing brands on the signals where they are likely to see the most ratings success.
To David Eduardo - published market revenue data is usually one to two years in arrears, is it not? 105.7's ratings have been in free fall since then.
Existing advertisers of Z105.3 are not going to suddenly cancel their buys if the station moves to a signal that is better suited for its target audience.
Similarly, existing advertisers of Real 96.7 are not going to suddenly cancel their buys if the station moves to a signal with wider population reach (as well as a somewhat better core Atlanta signal).
True, the Alt 105.7 revenue stream would be lost, but I suspect the real revenue number generated by that station is much less than whatever the last published figures suggest.
The "Real" brand would have potential to make a significant impact in the market if upgraded to a better signal. Over the long haul, I believe iHeart would be much better with "Real" on 105.3 than with "Alt" on 105.7. African Americans are much more loyal to FM radio than the type of listener Alt attempts to reach.
The "Real" brand would have potential to make a significant impact in the market if upgraded to a better signal.
Are you talking about The Beat? The Beat is 96.7.
They know a frequency shift will cause big audience losses for a while... or even forever. It always happens.
Are you talking about The Beat? The Beat is 96.7.
It didn't occur when Hot 97.5 moved to 107.9, and it didn't occur when Q100 moved from 100.5 to 99.7. To say "it always happen" contradicts empirical evidence.
Personally, I think it is unwise for a company as prominent as iHeart to not offer an Urban format on a decent signal in a market that is so consequential to hip-hop and R&B music in general. African Americans are more loyal to FM radio in general than white listeners. All one has to do is study ratings data for a couple minutes to reach that conclusion. TSL is usually very strong on Urban Contemporary and Urban AC stations.
$2 million to $2.5 million a year in billing is respectable for a station whose ratings are as poor as 105.7's, but in the context of the overall Atlanta market, those numbers are weak. Surely a better option exists, even if that option isn't necessarily Urban.
We'll have to agree to disagree on what you describe as Q100's "fail." Clearly, long-term, it was much better for Q100's health & viability to be on 99.7 MHz than on 100.5 MHz.
Another option I'd support, which involves fewer changes overall, would be to simply dump Alt from 105.7 in favor of Classic Hits or Variety Hits (keeping all other iHeart signals as-is).