The Clear Channel cutbacks have stirred up emotion from people inside CC as well as onlookers. They have been referred to as the evil empire for years, but now the rhetoric is even hotter. I don’t know if they are the evil empire or not. We can debate that and get into the complexities of went wrong, who is evil, etc. But it what is happening is really based on a simple principle: at some point you must pay the piper.
The automotive industry knows this very well. Those guys are not evil or stupid, they just rode a wave for as long as they could, knowing that the ride will end at some point and they would not have a plan B ready to go. Clear Channel and more so Cumulus, have base their model on producing a quick profit, but would obviously not be sustainable. It is like enjoying free cable… you don’t know how you got it, but let’s watch it until we see static one day… then scramble around to fix it.
What disgusts me is this announcement by the Mays brothers that they are ‘down in the trenches’ with the rest of the remaining Clear Channel people. They are going to feel the hurt as well as they clamp down on their base salaries to a mere $500,000 per year (stepping up in following years, of course... there is only so long one can live like a pauper). I want to know if there is ONE single CC employee that paused in the break room this morning and said… God bless those guys, they are sacrificing just like the rest of us.
While we do not use titles that much in our small, three station radio company, I would be considered the top exec. I took my pay cut last freaking year when things tightened up. If I am going to be first person to enjoy the good times, I better be the first one to take the hit during the slow times. I am now the lowest paid fulltime person in the entire company, taking a gross salary of about $10,500… and I don’t have a million in the bank either. I have cut back and live as simply as I did when I worked part time years ago. Maybe I am naive and stupid, but I will absolutely not lay off one person until I know that I have done all I can personally to prevent it. Have the Clear Channel suits taken the biggest hit they can, are they down to one used automobile each, have they sold their houses? Are they really suffering like those they had to lay off and those that will be laid off in the next round coming soon?
It is not all Clear Channel. I am sorry to target them, but they have put the targets on themselves today. There are other companies doing the same thing, but thankful that the spotlight is not on them right now.
Now, off the soapbox and into the facts. For you recently released Clear Channel folks, those that are still hanging on nervously for now, or others in the same kind of situation with the other major companies: Listen to your family and friends when they tell you to hang in there. Here is why. The majors have not completed paying the piper yet. Starting just before May and continuing for the next year or so thereafter, these companies will be forced to do major market spin offs. Remember, FM facilities cannot voluntarily go away. They must be operated by someone no matter what the market conditions are like. The majors will continue to sell off stations and markets at pennies on the dollar, as they have quietly and randomly been doing already. Smaller operators will be back in the game with substantially smaller note payments. This means more room for payroll, even more than back when the economy was booming.
The age of the mom and pops are coming back, out of necessity. Just remember, that is not all a bed of roses either. You will get calls from the owner’s wife on the hotline telling you to drop a song because she does not like it. But, the emphasis will shift from shareholders venture capitalists to locally produced radio and the people that make it happen.
What about this shift to even more national syndication by the majors? Yes, it will happen in the short-term. But it does not permanently fix the problem and it will have no bearing on the lump payments due by some of the major companies. Only one way out of this mess for the majors… pay the piper everything he is due… regroup and come back to try it again next cycle.
Seriously, hang in there. This story is not over yet.
The automotive industry knows this very well. Those guys are not evil or stupid, they just rode a wave for as long as they could, knowing that the ride will end at some point and they would not have a plan B ready to go. Clear Channel and more so Cumulus, have base their model on producing a quick profit, but would obviously not be sustainable. It is like enjoying free cable… you don’t know how you got it, but let’s watch it until we see static one day… then scramble around to fix it.
What disgusts me is this announcement by the Mays brothers that they are ‘down in the trenches’ with the rest of the remaining Clear Channel people. They are going to feel the hurt as well as they clamp down on their base salaries to a mere $500,000 per year (stepping up in following years, of course... there is only so long one can live like a pauper). I want to know if there is ONE single CC employee that paused in the break room this morning and said… God bless those guys, they are sacrificing just like the rest of us.
While we do not use titles that much in our small, three station radio company, I would be considered the top exec. I took my pay cut last freaking year when things tightened up. If I am going to be first person to enjoy the good times, I better be the first one to take the hit during the slow times. I am now the lowest paid fulltime person in the entire company, taking a gross salary of about $10,500… and I don’t have a million in the bank either. I have cut back and live as simply as I did when I worked part time years ago. Maybe I am naive and stupid, but I will absolutely not lay off one person until I know that I have done all I can personally to prevent it. Have the Clear Channel suits taken the biggest hit they can, are they down to one used automobile each, have they sold their houses? Are they really suffering like those they had to lay off and those that will be laid off in the next round coming soon?
It is not all Clear Channel. I am sorry to target them, but they have put the targets on themselves today. There are other companies doing the same thing, but thankful that the spotlight is not on them right now.
Now, off the soapbox and into the facts. For you recently released Clear Channel folks, those that are still hanging on nervously for now, or others in the same kind of situation with the other major companies: Listen to your family and friends when they tell you to hang in there. Here is why. The majors have not completed paying the piper yet. Starting just before May and continuing for the next year or so thereafter, these companies will be forced to do major market spin offs. Remember, FM facilities cannot voluntarily go away. They must be operated by someone no matter what the market conditions are like. The majors will continue to sell off stations and markets at pennies on the dollar, as they have quietly and randomly been doing already. Smaller operators will be back in the game with substantially smaller note payments. This means more room for payroll, even more than back when the economy was booming.
The age of the mom and pops are coming back, out of necessity. Just remember, that is not all a bed of roses either. You will get calls from the owner’s wife on the hotline telling you to drop a song because she does not like it. But, the emphasis will shift from shareholders venture capitalists to locally produced radio and the people that make it happen.
What about this shift to even more national syndication by the majors? Yes, it will happen in the short-term. But it does not permanently fix the problem and it will have no bearing on the lump payments due by some of the major companies. Only one way out of this mess for the majors… pay the piper everything he is due… regroup and come back to try it again next cycle.
Seriously, hang in there. This story is not over yet.