josh said:
HI Fred,
Good point.
Mike mentioned the hispanic format. I don't understand why it is a bad format other than the fact that a good portion of the audience would consist of illegal immigrants that can't report to Arbitron.
Fred I do think an easy listening format albeit with a more contemporary library library possibly than WDUV would do well. I think B101 and WJBR air too much kid stuff that people in the upper twenties to forties would prefer to do without.
Appreciate thoughts on this.
Musical tastes are diverse. Maybe more diverse than a generation or two ago. And people are less willing to listen to something that isn't exactly what they want. In additional to musical tastes, add in language, political preferences, sports... There are not enough stations in this market or any other for all the possible formats. Somebody gets left out.
Soft AC fans can get sort of close to what they want from B-101, JBR or maybe 98.1. Probably, years ago they got closer to what they wanted but those stations (like most) keep evolving to keep the money demos in their sights. A few years ago they planned a lot of 60s-70s music. Now, it's 70s-80s music (and 90s are creeping in). What you call "kids' stuff."
And soft AC fans always have the Internet.
Here's the hard part. Radio stations don't make money from ratings. They can use ratings to sell but selling makes money, not ratings. WPEN 950 had respectable ratings playing standards but they weren't making money. They had some local accounts but ad agencies were not interested. Same for soft AC and, yes, even right-wing talk. You only see raw totals in the published ratings but that's not what matters to ad agency media buyers. They want to know who is listening, and whether it's the kind of people who are likely to buy the clients' products.
Soft AC is available on the Internet. Maybe soft AC fans are slow to embrace Internet radio. Whatever it is that may make soft AC (or older) listeners slow to embrace new media, also makes them slow to embrace new products. That makes them not good prospects for advertisers. This discussion has happened here many times. Yes, older people have disposable income. They've already bought much of what they need, they aren't raising families and brand preferences are pretty set. Besides, a station like B-101 can deliver older listeners, in addition to "kids," because it's pretty much the best option for older listeners.
Now, somebody is going to want to point out somebody (themselves or somebody they know) who is an exception. Somebody in their 20s who likes soft AC, somebody in their 70s who listens online or even early-adopter grandparents. It happens. But media buyers aren't looking at individuals; they look at statistics.
PS: If you think a "good portion" of the Spanish-speaking population is undocumented, you might like IQ more than you realize. :
