GlennO said:"Slick" implies something less than flattering. It is what it is: one spot lasting a few seconds between songs. Cumulus Media has done this for some time. It's not a brand new thing. To old radio guys they may sound strange between songs without station mentions, but radio companies have a right to try a few different approaches to generating revenue.
luperm said:I'd rather hear a 5 second quickie during a song transition or a sponsored program element than a 4 minute stopset that brings momentum to a grinding halt.
Who actually sticks around and listens to the stopsets?
luperm said:Who actually sticks around and listens to the stopsets?
reelyreal said:Think about it: If NOBODY was listening to radio commercials, would advertisers continue to see results from their radio advertising?
http://www.arbitron.com/study/spot_study.asp
Bill DeFelice said:reelyreal said:Think about it: If NOBODY was listening to radio commercials, would advertisers continue to see results from their radio advertising?
http://www.arbitron.com/study/spot_study.asp
I hate to say it, but consider the source. Would they really say nobody was listening? That's just like the HD Radio Lobby claiming quantities of HD Radios sold that sound way too inflated (see the discussion in the corresponding area of RD).
CTListener said:Bill DeFelice said:I hate to say it, but consider the source. Would they really say nobody was listening? That's just like the HD Radio Lobby claiming quantities of HD Radios sold that sound way too inflated (see the discussion in the corresponding area of RD).
Well, they have to put something out there to counter the haters who, based only on what they know about listening habits of their friends and family, declare over and over on that same forum that HD has only "a couple" or "half a dozen" listeners in a given market.
The whole idea will be most effective if the difference is clearly pointed out to listeners and sponsors. This approach contrasts sharply with traditional stop sets (commercial breaks that can run six minutes or more). How would you promote this any more accurately? As long as you don't say "commercial free" or play these mini-spots between every other song, what's the problem?reelyreal said:I just want to reiterate the fact that I love the idea. I think it's innovative and will be very effective. I think saying "we'll never stop for a commercial" is misleading.