I don't know who to root for!?? First you have CBS ... with Mel ... and the year-over-year directives of "throw enough sales people at a market until you make some numbers". Never mind that in implementation what this really meant was a bunch of new-bies launching into the market every Monday stepping all over each other with copies of the market newspaper advertisers safely tucked under the arm. (Sidebar = meanwhile Mel blows off ALL new media plays because it's not "familiar" to him). So out of sheer fear they usually make numbers ... the better stations do well because they've had veteran programmers at the helm driving a decent product. Eventually Mel goes away, newer thinking prevails ... but now it's Les calling shots and pretty gung-ho to make some revenue with all available opportunities under consideration.
Then you have Google...which grabs a couple of radio players (most notably dMarc) and decides suddenly they are experts. For me, this was deja vu with some local companies and THEIR instant understanding of the broadcast game just because they launched into the internet, content, or streaming businesses during our LAST decade.
When you put the two together, I don't exactly see a huge population of innovative sales people on the radio side, and still see a bunch of arrogant fresh-out-of-college software weenies on the other. I suspect in the end if the "Google model" proves that SOME advertising really is a "commodity" sell, it could end up being like what happens in markets like Olympia. You have a player like Mix96 that runs a pretty decent operation. Along come the other players at tendollars-a-hollar and suddenly the limited number of advertisers are tainted on rate, disillusioned on results, and the game is somewhat poisoned for everyone who is trying to play.
Since Les is the person this week who's been screaming "there is no NEW media and there is no OLD media...there is only .... MEDIA" maybe he's got this licked better than anyone else. But the track record isn't exactly ON THE SIDE of the broadcasters to take every vendor glossy flyer and turn it into billions of dollars of "no effort" revenue.