virgilstreetnc said:
Before we get too far off topic, remember, there actually still are some stations out there servicing their communities, are not corporate owned, and are doing okay.
What I was originally looking for were suggestions and speculation on what's actually working in small markets. Any?
As far as music formats go, a lot depends on the market. If you find yourself surrounded by 6 or 8 Country stations, you may need to go in a different direction. But the way things are looking, music of any kind on radio may be an endangered species, anyway.
Focus on information. Yes, local news. Yes, fire calls (yeah--make sure somebody always has an ear on the scanner) and lost dogs & cats & cows. Do obits and birth announcements. Do as much high school sports--football, boys & girls basketball, baseball/softball--as possible. Do Little League play-by-play. Make "Community News" --public service announcements-- a central part of your on-air content. Broadcast "live" from every carnival & fair & craft show & Rotary/Kiwanis/Sertoma event in your core coverage area. Make the air staff your biggest expense. Do everything possible to have 6 AM to 7 PM covered with live, local human beings, and if you can possibly afford to hire a kid for evenings too, do it. Schedule everyone for a 6-day week so weekends are covered, too.
We have radio stations in towns of 8,000... 6,000... 7,000... 10,000... and it works. Our most difficult task has been reviving a perfectly AM/FM good property in a town of 6,000 (county of 80,000) that had been owned by the local newspaper for decades and run mostly off a satellite. It was very tough sledding for the first year or so, but by doing all these things, we've overcome a lot of apathy and now have the billing up in a healthy range.
Point is... there are too many places already for a listener to hear Tim McGraw songs. Giving them another does nothing to set your station apart. But if your station is the one talking about Aunt Sharon's new baby or Uncle Bill's Little League team or whether Foreigner or the Oak Ridge Boys are playing tonight at the Firemen's Carnival, you're making a connection that XM or the iPod will never make.