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Smart vs Cheap

Salty dog, indeed!

Yup, pretty damn salty! :) You really have significant experience with this touchy subject--there's no doubt about that. And I don't doubt Arbitron's official position: that college students aren't supposed to get measured. But there's a lot of evidence in the State College market (and Ithaca, Ann Arbor, Champaign, Iowa City, Tuscaloosa, Athens) that most students at large universities DO come into play.

Why? Well, think about State College. Roughly 42,000 students; around 7,000 of 'em are grad students--most in the 25-34 demo, and ALL living off campus. Of the 35,000 undergrads, only about 13,000 live in PSU housing--22,000 don't. Many of us have the misfortune of having some of them live in OUR neighborhoods. :) And because so many--literally thousands of them--are spread all over town, Arbitron can't help but include them. Look at the evidence in State College.

Let's see if I remember how to do this. Go to your Maximizer program and punch "stations." Create a "combo" that includes all stations in the market (call it "All Radio"). Then go to "estimates" and pick Cume Persons. Run a report for Mon-Sun 6A-Mid (the whole week) for each demo: P12-17, P18-24, P25-34, P35-44, P45-54, et cetera). What that shows is the total number of different people who listened to radio at least once during the week in each demo.

I'll betcha a 6-pack of your favorite brew that the 6-year bracket of people between 18 & 24--the "undergrads"--is much larger than any other 10-year bracket in other age groups. And I'll bet the 25-34 group is the next largest. I'll also bet that the 18-24 total is damn close to PSU's undergrad enrollment.

If you do the same thing in Altoona or Williamsport, the 18-24 group will be among the smallest bunch of listeners.

Point is, they ARE being measured, regardless of what Arbitron says. And if that's the case, you can't afford to pretend that they're not.

Give it a try and let us know how it comes out in real life.

>
> About ten years ago I sat in on an Arbitron small
> market advisory meeting in which I asked about the students
> at Penn State and other college towns. Diaries do not go to
> students, they don’t they are NOT county residents; they
> don’t have a mailing/ billing address here. Arbitron can’t
> claim the old barracks and temporary housing deal as you
> mentioned months ago. Mailers go out to PERMINANT
> addressees not addresses in the market and are designed to
> target the people who are residents not “transients” my
> issue is that for four to eight years those “transients” are
> here not at home.
>
> No books to the dorms, no books to the apartments. However
> you can rest assured that a rural female that is the type
> who clips coupons and will take time to do a survey will
> react in a certain way. If she is told that she will get
> cash for each diary filled out for that household she will
> fill out one for her, one for dad, one for each kid and she
> might not be very accurate. We could shot holes all day in
> the survey after all look at the multiples already and the
> sample size has to be tiny for the last three to have the
> same exact share.
>
> As for the points that your buddy at Arbitron said about
> Ipods I posted about those trends a few weeks ago, it showed
> that its about 13% of the total population have one and it
> does not replace radio. In the younger demo its share is
> surprisingly smaller too. I think you have made great
> points about why what stations did what they did here and
> how they are rated and perceived. From what you write you
> are a salty dog in the business, I just fought this fight
> first hand with Arbitron in person at the round table, and
> they told me that students were no counted because well,
> they “don’t count”. -TS
>
>
>
> > It's not that we don't understand the absence of Arbitron
> > diaries in "group housing," or the difference between
> > temporary addresses and permanent addresses. But you seem
> to
> > be under the impression that the huge bulge in Centre
> > County's population curve in the 18-24/18-34 cells, and
> the
> > corresponding huge bulge in the Arbitron listening profile
>
> > for the market, isn't caused by Penn State students. You
> > may just have to trust us on this: in markets without
> major
> > universities, you don't have this. (And, if you do nothing
>
> > but apply a little common sense, it'll occur to you that
> all
> > 42,000 PSU students aren't living in dorms, frats or
> "group
> > homes." If you have a normal residential phone number,
> > you're in Arbitron's database of potential diary keepers.
> > Betcha a dollar most of the 42,000 fall into that
> category).
> >
> >
> > Or suit yourself and pretend they don't count.
> >
> >
> > > Permnant address guys, I had an adress in Lock Haven and
>
> > > Bellefonte, Bellefonte was my permnant address, but I
> > > recived mail in Lock Haven.
> > >
> >
>
 
Lite & Z

Take 3-WZ for instance. I for one refuse to believe that half their audience just up and went to Lite all of a sudden. The music mix is too
> different and I can tell you that people are not Following
> Delillah in droves man...that just does not happen.

The CDT article said they're still #1 in Adults 25-44, so if Lite took any listeners away they were probably in the 45+ category. Though I'm sure their pride was hurt by dropping 4 places in 12+, it shouldn't hurt sales. Nobody buys 12+. Gotta think the folks at Forever are laughing about Lite's 18-34 and 18-24 numbers--those will disappear in the fall, never to be seen again. But I guarantee you the other sales people in the market are gonna be hammering Hot with that one!


> State College's book as is the case in many SMALL markets is
> especially sensitive because one person counts for SOOOO
> many. The sampling size is just too small.

Welcome to America's 250th largest market!
 
Re: Salty dog, indeed!

>

I will buy the round just to hear some good talk! I wish that We wouls get buys other then one or two deep looking at us as part of the Johnstown TV market! Great points on maximizer and we run into it in other towns. It was pitched to me a few times and I see it can truly make anybody a star.

Yup, pretty damn salty! :) You really have significant
> experience with this touchy subject--there's no doubt about
> that. And I don't doubt Arbitron's official position: that
> college students aren't supposed to get measured. But
> there's a lot of evidence in the State College market (and
> Ithaca, Ann Arbor, Champaign, Iowa City, Tuscaloosa, Athens)
> that most students at large universities DO come into play.
>
>
> Why? Well, think about State College. Roughly 42,000
> students; around 7,000 of 'em are grad students--most in the
> 25-34 demo, and ALL living off campus. Of the 35,000
> undergrads, only about 13,000 live in PSU housing--22,000
> don't. Many of us have the misfortune of having some of them
> live in OUR neighborhoods. :) And because so many--literally
> thousands of them--are spread all over town, Arbitron can't
> help but include them. Look at the evidence in State
> College.
>
> Let's see if I remember how to do this. Go to your Maximizer
> program and punch "stations." Create a "combo" that includes
> all stations in the market (call it "All Radio"). Then go to
> "estimates" and pick Cume Persons. Run a report for Mon-Sun
> 6A-Mid (the whole week) for each demo: P12-17, P18-24,
> P25-34, P35-44, P45-54, et cetera). What that shows is the
> total number of different people who listened to radio at
> least once during the week in each demo.
>
> I'll betcha a 6-pack of your favorite brew that the 6-year
> bracket of people between 18 & 24--the "undergrads"--is much
> larger than any other 10-year bracket in other age groups.
> And I'll bet the 25-34 group is the next largest. I'll also
> bet that the 18-24 total is damn close to PSU's undergrad
> enrollment.
>
> If you do the same thing in Altoona or Williamsport, the
> 18-24 group will be among the smallest bunch of listeners.
>
> Point is, they ARE being measured, regardless of what
> Arbitron says. And if that's the case, you can't afford to
> pretend that they're not.
>
> Give it a try and let us know how it comes out in real life.
>
>
> >
> > About ten years ago I sat in on an Arbitron small
> > market advisory meeting in which I asked about the
> students
> > at Penn State and other college towns. Diaries do not go
> to
> > students, they don’t they are NOT county residents; they
> > don’t have a mailing/ billing address here. Arbitron can’t
>
> > claim the old barracks and temporary housing deal as you
> > mentioned months ago. Mailers go out to PERMINANT
> > addressees not addresses in the market and are designed to
>
> > target the people who are residents not “transients” my
> > issue is that for four to eight years those “transients”
> are
> > here not at home.
> >
> > No books to the dorms, no books to the apartments.
> However
> > you can rest assured that a rural female that is the type
> > who clips coupons and will take time to do a survey will
> > react in a certain way. If she is told that she will get
> > cash for each diary filled out for that household she will
>
> > fill out one for her, one for dad, one for each kid and
> she
> > might not be very accurate. We could shot holes all day in
>
> > the survey after all look at the multiples already and the
>
> > sample size has to be tiny for the last three to have the
> > same exact share.
> >
> > As for the points that your buddy at Arbitron said
> about
> > Ipods I posted about those trends a few weeks ago, it
> showed
> > that its about 13% of the total population have one and it
>
> > does not replace radio. In the younger demo its share is
> > surprisingly smaller too. I think you have made great
> > points about why what stations did what they did here and
> > how they are rated and perceived. From what you write you
> > are a salty dog in the business, I just fought this fight
> > first hand with Arbitron in person at the round table, and
>
> > they told me that students were no counted because well,
> > they “don’t count”. -TS
> >
> >
> >
> > > It's not that we don't understand the absence of
> Arbitron
> > > diaries in "group housing," or the difference between
> > > temporary addresses and permanent addresses. But you
> seem
> > to
> > > be under the impression that the huge bulge in Centre
> > > County's population curve in the 18-24/18-34 cells, and
> > the
> > > corresponding huge bulge in the Arbitron listening
> profile
> >
> > > for the market, isn't caused by Penn State students.
> You
> > > may just have to trust us on this: in markets without
> > major
> > > universities, you don't have this. (And, if you do
> nothing
> >
> > > but apply a little common sense, it'll occur to you that
>
> > all
> > > 42,000 PSU students aren't living in dorms, frats or
> > "group
> > > homes." If you have a normal residential phone number,
> > > you're in Arbitron's database of potential diary
> keepers.
> > > Betcha a dollar most of the 42,000 fall into that
> > category).
> > >
> > >
> > > Or suit yourself and pretend they don't count.
> > >
> > >
> > > > Permnant address guys, I had an adress in Lock Haven
> and
> >
> > > > Bellefonte, Bellefonte was my permnant address, but I
> > > > recived mail in Lock Haven.
> > > >
> > >
> >
>
 
Re: Salty dog, indeed!

I'm not saying that the students don't end up with one every now and then, my point is permanat address. This seems to be where everyone is getting stuck. So I talked with one of my USPS friends and here is his view:

"Students usually have more than one address when they go away to school. They have the address that they will be living at while in school. Then there home address. Usually this is the permanant address. 20% of the grad students usually make State College there permanant address. Undergrands usually have a secondary address."

So according to the post office. Whether you live on or off campus. If you have a permanant address somewhere else State College is your secondary address. Therefore they would not be counted because it is not a premanant address. Ok now that I have tried to clear that up. Let's point out something else. This book could really be considered a throw away book. Look at all the press that Forever has gotten. Do you really think that people weren't going to go and check out. Have you ever listened to WLTS for more than an hour. You can pretty much perdict the next song coming up. QWK Rock is ok but WBUS is a far better station. WJHT may play some good music every now and then, but seriously I hear some guy hardcore rapping at me at 7 in the morning it's a little much (Sorry Glen). Give it another book and see if Forever can retain the top 5. My prediction for fall is WFGY, WBUS, WZWW, WRSC, WGMR/WJHT (Tied), WLTS, WQWK, WOWY, WUBZ. Anyone care to take bets???



> Yup, pretty damn salty! :) You really have significant
> experience with this touchy subject--there's no doubt about
> that. And I don't doubt Arbitron's official position: that
> college students aren't supposed to get measured. But
> there's a lot of evidence in the State College market (and
> Ithaca, Ann Arbor, Champaign, Iowa City, Tuscaloosa, Athens)
> that most students at large universities DO come into play.
>
>
> Why? Well, think about State College. Roughly 42,000
> students; around 7,000 of 'em are grad students--most in the
> 25-34 demo, and ALL living off campus. Of the 35,000
> undergrads, only about 13,000 live in PSU housing--22,000
> don't. Many of us have the misfortune of having some of them
> live in OUR neighborhoods. :) And because so many--literally
> thousands of them--are spread all over town, Arbitron can't
> help but include them. Look at the evidence in State
> College.
>
> Let's see if I remember how to do this. Go to your Maximizer
> program and punch "stations." Create a "combo" that includes
> all stations in the market (call it "All Radio"). Then go to
> "estimates" and pick Cume Persons. Run a report for Mon-Sun
> 6A-Mid (the whole week) for each demo: P12-17, P18-24,
> P25-34, P35-44, P45-54, et cetera). What that shows is the
> total number of different people who listened to radio at
> least once during the week in each demo.
>
> I'll betcha a 6-pack of your favorite brew that the 6-year
> bracket of people between 18 & 24--the "undergrads"--is much
> larger than any other 10-year bracket in other age groups.
> And I'll bet the 25-34 group is the next largest. I'll also
> bet that the 18-24 total is damn close to PSU's undergrad
> enrollment.
>
> If you do the same thing in Altoona or Williamsport, the
> 18-24 group will be among the smallest bunch of listeners.
>
> Point is, they ARE being measured, regardless of what
> Arbitron says. And if that's the case, you can't afford to
> pretend that they're not.
>
> Give it a try and let us know how it comes out in real life.
>
>
> >
> > About ten years ago I sat in on an Arbitron small
> > market advisory meeting in which I asked about the
> students
> > at Penn State and other college towns. Diaries do not go
> to
> > students, they don’t they are NOT county residents; they
> > don’t have a mailing/ billing address here. Arbitron can’t
>
> > claim the old barracks and temporary housing deal as you
> > mentioned months ago. Mailers go out to PERMINANT
> > addressees not addresses in the market and are designed to
>
> > target the people who are residents not “transients” my
> > issue is that for four to eight years those “transients”
> are
> > here not at home.
> >
> > No books to the dorms, no books to the apartments.
> However
> > you can rest assured that a rural female that is the type
> > who clips coupons and will take time to do a survey will
> > react in a certain way. If she is told that she will get
> > cash for each diary filled out for that household she will
>
> > fill out one for her, one for dad, one for each kid and
> she
> > might not be very accurate. We could shot holes all day in
>
> > the survey after all look at the multiples already and the
>
> > sample size has to be tiny for the last three to have the
> > same exact share.
> >
> > As for the points that your buddy at Arbitron said
> about
> > Ipods I posted about those trends a few weeks ago, it
> showed
> > that its about 13% of the total population have one and it
>
> > does not replace radio. In the younger demo its share is
> > surprisingly smaller too. I think you have made great
> > points about why what stations did what they did here and
> > how they are rated and perceived. From what you write you
> > are a salty dog in the business, I just fought this fight
> > first hand with Arbitron in person at the round table, and
>
> > they told me that students were no counted because well,
> > they “don’t count”. -TS
> >
> >
> >
> > > It's not that we don't understand the absence of
> Arbitron
> > > diaries in "group housing," or the difference between
> > > temporary addresses and permanent addresses. But you
> seem
> > to
> > > be under the impression that the huge bulge in Centre
> > > County's population curve in the 18-24/18-34 cells, and
> > the
> > > corresponding huge bulge in the Arbitron listening
> profile
> >
> > > for the market, isn't caused by Penn State students.
> You
> > > may just have to trust us on this: in markets without
> > major
> > > universities, you don't have this. (And, if you do
> nothing
> >
> > > but apply a little common sense, it'll occur to you that
>
> > all
> > > 42,000 PSU students aren't living in dorms, frats or
> > "group
> > > homes." If you have a normal residential phone number,
> > > you're in Arbitron's database of potential diary
> keepers.
> > > Betcha a dollar most of the 42,000 fall into that
> > category).
> > >
> > >
> > > Or suit yourself and pretend they don't count.
> > >
> > >
> > > > Permnant address guys, I had an adress in Lock Haven
> and
> >
> > > > Bellefonte, Bellefonte was my permnant address, but I
> > > > recived mail in Lock Haven.
> > > >
> > >
> >
>
 
Re: Salty dog, indeed!

>
The sample sizes are too small.......consistency reigns.......94.5 WLTS is one of the few stations that did not change freqs and/or calls.a/c is a/c a very at work type of format a reliable friend.......why do you think valerie smuldoon has has stayed at WLTW New York for 25 years...consistency...a friendly voice and easy song let's work along...delilah, bob and sheri who cares its 9-5 and weekends for the Bulb. I am sure the folks at 3wz are analyzing the maximizer and fine tuning-and btw if its a throw away book why did people buy it? Press is good and yes Glen is doing a good job there....but everyone has the opportunity to get seen...do a remote! for free! and from my somewhat jaded seat it looks like the WOWY listeners followed us down the dial and we added some too....so move the WOWY call sign up a couple of notches on your score sheet. Make your weekends sound great-remember they left the dial on your station Sunday ......have a great weekend all




I'm not saying that the students don't end up with one every
> now and then, my point is permanat address. This seems to be
> where everyone is getting stuck. So I talked with one of my
> USPS friends and here is his view:
>
> "Students usually have more than one address when they go
> away to school. They have the address that they will be
> living at while in school. Then there home address. Usually
> this is the permanant address. 20% of the grad students
> usually make State College there permanant address.
> Undergrands usually have a secondary address."
>
> So according to the post office. Whether you live on or off
> campus. If you have a permanant address somewhere else State
> College is your secondary address. Therefore they would not
> be counted because it is not a premanant address. Ok now
> that I have tried to clear that up. Let's point out
> something else. This book could really be considered a throw
> away book. Look at all the press that Forever has gotten. Do
> you really think that people weren't going to go and check
> out. Have you ever listened to WLTS for more than an hour.
> You can pretty much perdict the next song coming up. QWK
> Rock is ok but WBUS is a far better station. WJHT may play
> some good music every now and then, but seriously I hear
> some guy hardcore rapping at me at 7 in the morning it's a
> little much (Sorry Glen). Give it another book and see if
> Forever can retain the top 5. My prediction for fall is
> WFGY, WBUS, WZWW, WRSC, WGMR/WJHT (Tied), WLTS, WQWK, WOWY,
> WUBZ. Anyone care to take bets???
>
>
>
> > Yup, pretty damn salty! :) You really have significant
> > experience with this touchy subject--there's no doubt
> about
> > that. And I don't doubt Arbitron's official position: that
>
> > college students aren't supposed to get measured. But
> > there's a lot of evidence in the State College market (and
>
> > Ithaca, Ann Arbor, Champaign, Iowa City, Tuscaloosa,
> Athens)
> > that most students at large universities DO come into
> play.
> >
> >
> > Why? Well, think about State College. Roughly 42,000
> > students; around 7,000 of 'em are grad students--most in
> the
> > 25-34 demo, and ALL living off campus. Of the 35,000
> > undergrads, only about 13,000 live in PSU housing--22,000
> > don't. Many of us have the misfortune of having some of
> them
> > live in OUR neighborhoods. :) And because so
> many--literally
> > thousands of them--are spread all over town, Arbitron
> can't
> > help but include them. Look at the evidence in State
> > College.
> >
> > Let's see if I remember how to do this. Go to your
> Maximizer
> > program and punch "stations." Create a "combo" that
> includes
> > all stations in the market (call it "All Radio"). Then go
> to
> > "estimates" and pick Cume Persons. Run a report for
> Mon-Sun
> > 6A-Mid (the whole week) for each demo: P12-17, P18-24,
> > P25-34, P35-44, P45-54, et cetera). What that shows is the
>
> > total number of different people who listened to radio at
> > least once during the week in each demo.
> >
> > I'll betcha a 6-pack of your favorite brew that the 6-year
>
> > bracket of people between 18 & 24--the "undergrads"--is
> much
> > larger than any other 10-year bracket in other age groups.
>
> > And I'll bet the 25-34 group is the next largest. I'll
> also
> > bet that the 18-24 total is damn close to PSU's undergrad
> > enrollment.
> >
> > If you do the same thing in Altoona or Williamsport, the
> > 18-24 group will be among the smallest bunch of listeners.
>
> >
> > Point is, they ARE being measured, regardless of what
> > Arbitron says. And if that's the case, you can't afford to
>
> > pretend that they're not.
> >
> > Give it a try and let us know how it comes out in real
> life.
> >
> >
> > >
> > > About ten years ago I sat in on an Arbitron small
> > > market advisory meeting in which I asked about the
> > students
> > > at Penn State and other college towns. Diaries do not go
>
> > to
> > > students, they don’t they are NOT county residents; they
>
> > > don’t have a mailing/ billing address here. Arbitron
> can’t
> >
> > > claim the old barracks and temporary housing deal as you
>
> > > mentioned months ago. Mailers go out to PERMINANT
> > > addressees not addresses in the market and are designed
> to
> >
> > > target the people who are residents not “transients” my
> > > issue is that for four to eight years those “transients”
>
> > are
> > > here not at home.
> > >
> > > No books to the dorms, no books to the apartments.
> > However
> > > you can rest assured that a rural female that is the
> type
> > > who clips coupons and will take time to do a survey will
>
> > > react in a certain way. If she is told that she will get
>
> > > cash for each diary filled out for that household she
> will
> >
> > > fill out one for her, one for dad, one for each kid and
> > she
> > > might not be very accurate. We could shot holes all day
> in
> >
> > > the survey after all look at the multiples already and
> the
> >
> > > sample size has to be tiny for the last three to have
> the
> > > same exact share.
> > >
> > > As for the points that your buddy at Arbitron said
> > about
> > > Ipods I posted about those trends a few weeks ago, it
> > showed
> > > that its about 13% of the total population have one and
> it
> >
> > > does not replace radio. In the younger demo its share is
>
> > > surprisingly smaller too. I think you have made great
> > > points about why what stations did what they did here
> and
> > > how they are rated and perceived. From what you write
> you
> > > are a salty dog in the business, I just fought this
> fight
> > > first hand with Arbitron in person at the round table,
> and
> >
> > > they told me that students were no counted because well,
>
> > > they “don’t count”. -TS
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > > > It's not that we don't understand the absence of
> > Arbitron
> > > > diaries in "group housing," or the difference between
> > > > temporary addresses and permanent addresses. But you
> > seem
> > > to
> > > > be under the impression that the huge bulge in Centre
> > > > County's population curve in the 18-24/18-34 cells,
> and
> > > the
> > > > corresponding huge bulge in the Arbitron listening
> > profile
> > >
> > > > for the market, isn't caused by Penn State students.
> > You
> > > > may just have to trust us on this: in markets without
> > > major
> > > > universities, you don't have this. (And, if you do
> > nothing
> > >
> > > > but apply a little common sense, it'll occur to you
> that
> >
> > > all
> > > > 42,000 PSU students aren't living in dorms, frats or
> > > "group
> > > > homes." If you have a normal residential phone number,
>
> > > > you're in Arbitron's database of potential diary
> > keepers.
> > > > Betcha a dollar most of the 42,000 fall into that
> > > category).
> > > >
> > > >
> > > > Or suit yourself and pretend they don't count.
> > > >
> > > >
> > > > > Permnant address guys, I had an adress in Lock Haven
>
> > and
> > >
> > > > > Bellefonte, Bellefonte was my permnant address, but
> I
> > > > > recived mail in Lock Haven.
> > > > >
> > > >
> > >
> >
>
 
Re: Salty dog, indeed!

> So according to the post office. Whether you live on or off
> campus. If you have a permanant address somewhere else State
> College is your secondary address. Therefore they would not
> be counted because it is not a premanant address. Ok now
> that I have tried to clear that up. Let's point out
> something else. This book could really be considered a throw
> away book. Look at all the press that Forever has gotten. Do
> you really think that people weren't going to go and check
> out.

Maybe people went and checked out the stations (and WOWY too as they were part of the equation) and realized they LIKED the stations...just because YOU don't like your competition, it doesn't mean the listeners don't.

> WJHT may play
> some good music every now and then, but seriously I hear
> some guy hardcore rapping at me at 7 in the morning it's a
> little much (Sorry Glen).

I have listened to both stations in passing and I can't really figure out the difference musically. What are you doing differently than Hot?
 
Counted or not, let's not forget this part!

Those thousands of students, grad and undergrad all shop somewhere around here. A grand majority have cars so it's not just downtown shopping.

Clients buy radio spots and have radio broadcasts on location. This brings out the students to shop at the businesses, increases sales for the business and sends out more money from the client to the radio stations in the form of more commercials and live broadcasts.

Counted or not, students do count regardless of whether or not the numbers reflect them.

Businesses rely on the sales persons to give them numbers because they want to hit their student audience but when it comes down to the nitty gritty, a book can only tell so much.

> I'm not saying that the students don't end up with one every
> now and then, my point is permanat address. This seems to be
> where everyone is getting stuck. So I talked with one of my
> USPS friends and here is his view:
>
> "Students usually have more than one address when they go
> away to school. They have the address that they will be
> living at while in school. Then there home address. Usually
> this is the permanant address. 20% of the grad students
> usually make State College there permanant address.
> Undergrands usually have a secondary address."
>
> So according to the post office. Whether you live on or off
> campus. If you have a permanant address somewhere else State
> College is your secondary address. Therefore they would not
> be counted because it is not a premanant address. Ok now
> that I have tried to clear that up. Let's point out
> something else. This book could really be considered a throw
> away book. Look at all the press that Forever has gotten. Do
> you really think that people weren't going to go and check
> out. Have you ever listened to WLTS for more than an hour.
> You can pretty much perdict the next song coming up. QWK
> Rock is ok but WBUS is a far better station. WJHT may play
> some good music every now and then, but seriously I hear
> some guy hardcore rapping at me at 7 in the morning it's a
> little much (Sorry Glen). Give it another book and see if
> Forever can retain the top 5. My prediction for fall is
> WFGY, WBUS, WZWW, WRSC, WGMR/WJHT (Tied), WLTS, WQWK, WOWY,
> WUBZ. Anyone care to take bets???
>
>
>
> > Yup, pretty damn salty! :) You really have significant
> > experience with this touchy subject--there's no doubt
> about
> > that. And I don't doubt Arbitron's official position: that
>
> > college students aren't supposed to get measured. But
> > there's a lot of evidence in the State College market (and
>
> > Ithaca, Ann Arbor, Champaign, Iowa City, Tuscaloosa,
> Athens)
> > that most students at large universities DO come into
> play.
> >
> >
> > Why? Well, think about State College. Roughly 42,000
> > students; around 7,000 of 'em are grad students--most in
> the
> > 25-34 demo, and ALL living off campus. Of the 35,000
> > undergrads, only about 13,000 live in PSU housing--22,000
> > don't. Many of us have the misfortune of having some of
> them
> > live in OUR neighborhoods. :) And because so
> many--literally
> > thousands of them--are spread all over town, Arbitron
> can't
> > help but include them. Look at the evidence in State
> > College.
> >
> > Let's see if I remember how to do this. Go to your
> Maximizer
> > program and punch "stations." Create a "combo" that
> includes
> > all stations in the market (call it "All Radio"). Then go
> to
> > "estimates" and pick Cume Persons. Run a report for
> Mon-Sun
> > 6A-Mid (the whole week) for each demo: P12-17, P18-24,
> > P25-34, P35-44, P45-54, et cetera). What that shows is the
>
> > total number of different people who listened to radio at
> > least once during the week in each demo.
> >
> > I'll betcha a 6-pack of your favorite brew that the 6-year
>
> > bracket of people between 18 & 24--the "undergrads"--is
> much
> > larger than any other 10-year bracket in other age groups.
>
> > And I'll bet the 25-34 group is the next largest. I'll
> also
> > bet that the 18-24 total is damn close to PSU's undergrad
> > enrollment.
> >
> > If you do the same thing in Altoona or Williamsport, the
> > 18-24 group will be among the smallest bunch of listeners.
>
> >
> > Point is, they ARE being measured, regardless of what
> > Arbitron says. And if that's the case, you can't afford to
>
> > pretend that they're not.
> >
> > Give it a try and let us know how it comes out in real
> life.
> >
> >
> > >
> > > About ten years ago I sat in on an Arbitron small
> > > market advisory meeting in which I asked about the
> > students
> > > at Penn State and other college towns. Diaries do not go
>
> > to
> > > students, they don’t they are NOT county residents; they
>
> > > don’t have a mailing/ billing address here. Arbitron
> can’t
> >
> > > claim the old barracks and temporary housing deal as you
>
> > > mentioned months ago. Mailers go out to PERMINANT
> > > addressees not addresses in the market and are designed
> to
> >
> > > target the people who are residents not “transients” my
> > > issue is that for four to eight years those “transients”
>
> > are
> > > here not at home.
> > >
> > > No books to the dorms, no books to the apartments.
> > However
> > > you can rest assured that a rural female that is the
> type
> > > who clips coupons and will take time to do a survey will
>
> > > react in a certain way. If she is told that she will get
>
> > > cash for each diary filled out for that household she
> will
> >
> > > fill out one for her, one for dad, one for each kid and
> > she
> > > might not be very accurate. We could shot holes all day
> in
> >
> > > the survey after all look at the multiples already and
> the
> >
> > > sample size has to be tiny for the last three to have
> the
> > > same exact share.
> > >
> > > As for the points that your buddy at Arbitron said
> > about
> > > Ipods I posted about those trends a few weeks ago, it
> > showed
> > > that its about 13% of the total population have one and
> it
> >
> > > does not replace radio. In the younger demo its share is
>
> > > surprisingly smaller too. I think you have made great
> > > points about why what stations did what they did here
> and
> > > how they are rated and perceived. From what you write
> you
> > > are a salty dog in the business, I just fought this
> fight
> > > first hand with Arbitron in person at the round table,
> and
> >
> > > they told me that students were no counted because well,
>
> > > they “don’t count”. -TS
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > > > It's not that we don't understand the absence of
> > Arbitron
> > > > diaries in "group housing," or the difference between
> > > > temporary addresses and permanent addresses. But you
> > seem
> > > to
> > > > be under the impression that the huge bulge in Centre
> > > > County's population curve in the 18-24/18-34 cells,
> and
> > > the
> > > > corresponding huge bulge in the Arbitron listening
> > profile
> > >
> > > > for the market, isn't caused by Penn State students.
> > You
> > > > may just have to trust us on this: in markets without
> > > major
> > > > universities, you don't have this. (And, if you do
> > nothing
> > >
> > > > but apply a little common sense, it'll occur to you
> that
> >
> > > all
> > > > 42,000 PSU students aren't living in dorms, frats or
> > > "group
> > > > homes." If you have a normal residential phone number,
>
> > > > you're in Arbitron's database of potential diary
> > keepers.
> > > > Betcha a dollar most of the 42,000 fall into that
> > > category).
> > > >
> > > >
> > > > Or suit yourself and pretend they don't count.
> > > >
> > > >
> > > > > Permnant address guys, I had an adress in Lock Haven
>
> > and
> > >
> > > > > Bellefonte, Bellefonte was my permnant address, but
> I
> > > > > recived mail in Lock Haven.
> > > > >
> > > >
> > >
> >
>
 
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