J
JohnRadioFan
Guest
When Braswell the other day talked about bonehead decisions by top management, I think at the top of the list, in my opinion,is what they allowed to happen to traditional oldies stations.
Let the facts speak for themselves. In markets such as Philadelphia, Boston and Miami (to use just a few examples) the ratings for oldies are solid. And more importantly, advertising revenue is solid as well. If demos skew older, so what? If the station has credability and a sales team who understand the format, the dollars will follow. About a week ago, I chatted with someone I've known at WMXJ Miami for the last 20 years and was told, once again, that they often have more advertising than they can even handle.
In a post on this board during the past week, someone mentioned that the Eagle 96.9 is just about where it was from a billing perspective when the format was oldies. That alone speaks volumes.
Back to bonehead decisions, the last time I looked at ratings for WCBS-FM in NYC, they have been at the bottom of the barrel consistantly since flipping from oldies to Jack. WABC in NYC does an oldies show now on Saturday nights and the listeners who call in are very compassionate about the format and are very resentful to what happened at CBS-FM. Listener loyalty is something that is very valuable to a stations's survival. This has been thrown away because we live in a 25-54 world. But again, if your product is good and advertisers see results, they will invest.
Back to a local Jax perspective. I think many of us just continue to be frustrated in that there was a tested and proven success story in the old Cool 96.9. We (especially me) are reminded that signal plays a big part and/or we have no idea what goes on behind the scenes. Even given that,let me blunt - Real leadership rises above adversity. In my work life, I never resorted to making excuses for performance that was not my best. Maybe that's just who I am and I expect that in others too. I know I'm in a minority here but I still say that a traditional oldies format can beat classic hits/rock or at the very least, can be at par. But you have to demonstrate a wining attitude.
With the buzz about Beatle Brunch, I have added 1010 to my AM presets. Although I have listened to the program via streaming from WMXJ on Sunday mornings since it left Jax, I'm sure I'll hear it on 1010 every once in a while. Incidently, that program is often the most listened to program on WMXJ and that has happened for over a decade. The program would have been a great addition to KOOL but then according to some of you, I'm clueless about radio so I'll just let it go.
<P ID="edit"><FONT class="small">Edited by JohnRadioFan on 03/10/06 12:30 PM.</FONT></P>
Let the facts speak for themselves. In markets such as Philadelphia, Boston and Miami (to use just a few examples) the ratings for oldies are solid. And more importantly, advertising revenue is solid as well. If demos skew older, so what? If the station has credability and a sales team who understand the format, the dollars will follow. About a week ago, I chatted with someone I've known at WMXJ Miami for the last 20 years and was told, once again, that they often have more advertising than they can even handle.
In a post on this board during the past week, someone mentioned that the Eagle 96.9 is just about where it was from a billing perspective when the format was oldies. That alone speaks volumes.
Back to bonehead decisions, the last time I looked at ratings for WCBS-FM in NYC, they have been at the bottom of the barrel consistantly since flipping from oldies to Jack. WABC in NYC does an oldies show now on Saturday nights and the listeners who call in are very compassionate about the format and are very resentful to what happened at CBS-FM. Listener loyalty is something that is very valuable to a stations's survival. This has been thrown away because we live in a 25-54 world. But again, if your product is good and advertisers see results, they will invest.
Back to a local Jax perspective. I think many of us just continue to be frustrated in that there was a tested and proven success story in the old Cool 96.9. We (especially me) are reminded that signal plays a big part and/or we have no idea what goes on behind the scenes. Even given that,let me blunt - Real leadership rises above adversity. In my work life, I never resorted to making excuses for performance that was not my best. Maybe that's just who I am and I expect that in others too. I know I'm in a minority here but I still say that a traditional oldies format can beat classic hits/rock or at the very least, can be at par. But you have to demonstrate a wining attitude.
With the buzz about Beatle Brunch, I have added 1010 to my AM presets. Although I have listened to the program via streaming from WMXJ on Sunday mornings since it left Jax, I'm sure I'll hear it on 1010 every once in a while. Incidently, that program is often the most listened to program on WMXJ and that has happened for over a decade. The program would have been a great addition to KOOL but then according to some of you, I'm clueless about radio so I'll just let it go.
<P ID="edit"><FONT class="small">Edited by JohnRadioFan on 03/10/06 12:30 PM.</FONT></P>