mistermicrophone said:
Josh C. said:
mistermicrophone said:
Josh C. said:
I'm not saying recurrents are a bad thing, but I've noticed stations relying on them much too heavily. In essence, use them, but don't abuse them. Too many stations today are abusing them.
Sometimes those recurrents test better than the currents with the LISTENERS...and isn't it about THEM?
The fact is, burnout is higher than callout (or any other form of testing) shows it to be, because when asked, most people respond positively because they
like the song, but they won't say they're tired of it even if they are, because they think that if they do, the song will just drop off, and they don't want that to happen.
WHAT??? Good research is NOT done under said station's name.
I never said it was.
mistermicrophone said:
So why would the people know who they are talking to about music and worry about if a song will go away??
I never said they'd know who they're talking to, but it's not as if it takes a rocket scientist to determine that the survey you're participating in has to do with radio airplay. Many people get those calls and just as many understand that's
why they're getting them. Believe me, the thought
does cross the mind. I have spoken to many non-radio people across the country on the matter, and they've all said the same thing.
mistermicrophone said:
Also, don't forget, listeners are asked if they like, dislike or are burned out/sick of a song and scored accordingly.
I accounted for that. As I said before, they won't say they're burned out or sick of a song because they realize the survey they're taking part in is used to determine airplay and they don't want to see these songs simply drop off of their favorite station because, despite the fact that they may be burned out on them, they still enjoy the song and would still like to hear it at some point in time.
mistermicrophone said:
If you don't trust research, what do YOU trust to program your station?
I never said I don't trust research. What I said was, sometimes it's a good thing to go a step further and simply say "okay, we've played this song into the ground and it's time to move on." Obviously that doesn't mean you should drop any song like a rock, but if you're running the same recurrent in high rotation for months and months on end, something needs to change. It takes a good MD to listen to their listeners. It takes an even
better MD to pick up on the things their listeners are thinking but aren't saying. That's where that MD has to take charge and start phasing recurrents out of high rotation. It's not as ridiculous an idea as you make it out to be, it's simply good radio.
mistermicrophone said:
Callout and research is not the be-all, end-all, but it should be the largest factor in music decisions!!
Yes, but intuition and knowledge of how your target demo thinks are factors just as large.