Goat Rodeo Cowboy said:MattParker said:Contradiction? Or are you saying radio is what those still listening want? That universe keep shrinking.
Bingo! That is what I read into his post.
You are correct. I could have said it in reverse as, "The people who like what terrestrial radio broadcasters are putting out listen to it. The rest don't."
TheBigA said:MattParker said:The observation that railroads thought they were in the train business, not the transportation business comes from Theodore Levitt, a professor of marketing in the Harvard Business School
I know. Who said it doesn't change the fact that it's wrong. The fact is that some of them DID expand into trucks, planes, and ships, once they became available. They are the ones still in business today.
Except that the companies that did diversify only did so after their original owners and managers drove them to the brink of disaster by continuing to think of themselves as being in the train business, not the transportation business. It took a long period of mergers, bouts of bankruptcies, government intervention, and a total replacement of the management of the old railroad companies to turn them into new transportation companies. The best metaphor to describe the current transportation companies with the same names as old railroad companies is the Phoenix, the mythical bird that arises from the ashes of its dead predecessor.
TheBigA said:MattParker said:Lots of companies have gone out of business by insisting on "selling what they own."
You can't sell what you don't own. That is the basic rule of business. If you try to, you will get sued.
You can sell what you don't own if what you are selling is a service, not a product. The broadcast industry doesn't own the songs it "sells". It simply plays them as a service.
TheBigA said:MattParker said:Some of the posts here suggest that some of the radio people here are focused on their industry's or company's own needs, not on needs of the listener or the advertiser.
It depends on what they do in the food chain. You sound like someone focused only on the programming. That's fine, but I imagine you also want to get paid. From my seat, everyone in the process needs to understand the bigger picture of how the programming they do affected the pay check they receive. Radio is in trouble because the people at the stations don't work together. Sales doesn't think about programming, and programming doesn't think about sales. That needs to change.
That's a small step in the right direction. Working together only helps if the team is all working together to move towards the correct goal. When a team works together towards the wrong goal, using the wrong strategy and tactics, it still eventually fails.