wadio said:
Holland, you're an interesting guy!
I'LL TAKE IT!
Consultants -- like dentists, divorce lawyers, and IRS auditors -- get called alotta things.
We've all chosen our career paths.
(That occurred to me as my doctor snapped-on that rubber glove.)
And, in my case, a couple previous career paths are jobs-now-facing-extinction: local disc jockey, single-station PD.
wadio said:
On one hand you seem to be saying that social media is the Holy Grail that will be radio's salvation...
"Seem," eh?
Without poring-over these-16-pages (so far), I'm certain I've never suggested that, here or elsewhere.
But that's the difference between "imply" and "infer."
Only a speaker can imply, only a listener can infer.
(
www.SurvivalSpeech.com)
wadio said:
On the other hand you're implying that radio has one foot in the grave and that it's only a matter of time before the bean counters destroy it, regardless of programming, social media or anything else. Elvis has left the building, so to speak.
I'm not implying that either.
I'M STATING IT.
And that's sure not just my opinion, or an opinion at all.
If you haven't yet, DO read (and note the date of) this document:
http://getonthenet.com/GleiserFritts.pdf
AT THE SAME TIME, this moment in radio history is yet-another-case-of finding-opportunity-in-chaos.
(Like the pool guys in South Florida, making a fortune, working for banks, tending to pools at foreclosed properties.)
In radio's case, the widening gulf between the Haves and Have-nots spells REAL opportunity for the diligent Haves.
Many "Mom & Pop" owners -- many-of-whom had no intention of selling -- took-the-money-and-skee-daddled when consolidators offered to obscenely-over-pay for their stations. But not ALL Mom & Pops.
And a next-gen' crop of Mom & Pops is already emerging.
"De-consolidation," as FCC Commissioner Robert McDowell put it, when I interviewed him.
(Scroll-down @
http://hollandcookemedia.wordpress.com/4jimbo/)
Often, these new indie owners:
a) are local business people, townies; not out-of-town publicly-traded corporations;
b) have "real money," not untenable debt, that's been sitting-on-the-sidelines...waiting; and
c) figure that NOW is close-enough-to-the-bottom to buy. Often they cite the Hubbard/Bonneville deal as a benchmark.
With The Big Companies burning-the-furniture, automating robo-stations, doing ZERO promotion, etc., more-nimble competitors find it easy to ROI diligence like promotion, research, adding-NEW-local on-air/online content, and, yes, a savvy consultant to-whom executing such stuff is not experimentation.
The only certainty the marketplace is showing us in these changing times is that business-as-usual guarantees attrition.
wadio said:
I think you're trying to change my mind.
NO.
That's something I only do for paying customers.
WHY do we presume that the goal of conversation is to
convince someone-else?
Why can't we just...converse?
As I told a reporter who interviewed me yesterday: "I'm frustrating to-talk-politics with, because I may be the only person in Talk Radio who thinks his opinion DOESN'T matter. I'm a professional eavesdropper, a lurker, usually too busy listening to talk."
As for talking-shop here, there's real value in the conversation, if you can tune-out the static inevitable in the consequence-free environment that comes with anonymity.
HC
www.HollandCooke.com
@HollandCooke
3/15