amfmxm said:
Elephant said:
Sean...As I posted on the Columbus board, it's disingenuous to say that WVKO beat WYTS when both stations 12+ number are below a 1 share. A 0.6 and a 0.8 are statistically tied. And, such a small sample is unreliable. WYTS's 3 book average is about a 0.6, while WVKO's is about a 0.7.
I will amend that statement if you can provide us with M-F 6a-7p cume and AQH numbers for both stations. Let's see which ones actually have the strengths and weaknesses. Weekends are less importamnt, but a Sat-Sun 6a-7p would also be helpful in determining how many people are actually tuning in and how many are staying tuned in.
Can you provide that info? Anybody else got Columbus breakouts?
For fun, we could look at the same numbers for WTDA to get a sense of what they're doing.
To get true perspective on the Columbus situation, you've got to step back from the decimal points separating these two underpowered radio stations and dissecting tiny demos & dayparts.
The big picture is that Columbus is a Democratic market, evidenced (again) by the huge 20-point win by the Dems in this week's election. Columbus isn't just a little bit Blue, it's (pardon the Michigan reference) Big Blue.
So what does Clear Channel program on the market's one mega-signal radio station--WTVN--the station that has been #1 or #2 in Columbus since Arbitron began surveying the town 60 years ago? Conservative Talk. And where do they put Progressive Talk? On the tiny and long-dead 1230 stick (BTW, back when that was Top 40 WCOL-AM, it was a killer). And when it doesn't rack up huge numbers, what does CC do? Flip it to more Conservative Talk. In a city that just voted overwhelmingly (again) Democratic.
Cynics will say "Yeah, but WTVN is #1." Hey, they've been #1 as long as any of us have been alive. If they put something on that huge signal that the majority of Columbus residents actually wanted to hear, WTVN would be even bigger. What they've done with 1230 is just adding insult to injury.
Knowing CC's political position, it is hard not to believe that what they've done in Columbus is intentional: helping the GOP keep the base incited in the largest city of the state that decided the 2004 election and will likely remain a "swing state" for years to come. But now, even the rest of Ohio is Blue.
I believe that what Holland Cooke has suggested is that Talk Radio programmers & managers need to step back at this point and reassess their content, at this point, given the landslide against the views they've been espousing for so long. In other words, it is time to be smart.
Columbus would be a great place to start.
Thanks, amfmxm.
For the benefit of those not familiar with what we're doing here in Columbus:
After more than a year being off the air, WVKO-AM went back on the air in the summer of 2007 with Spanish-language programming. Bernard Media, which took over operations following bankruptcy court proceedings, leased the AM operation to Cowtown Communications, headed by Gary Richards. The AM flipped to progressive talk on December 3, 2007. A sister FM station has a Spanish format.
Assisting Gary in getting the operation up and running were a dedicated group of disgruntled former 1230 listeners known as Ohio Majority Radio. Its leader, Russ Childers, has handled much of the engineering behind the station. My association with WVKO was initially as an advertiser (as was the case with 1230), but I have been doing the afternoon news since June. I go the studios from my job with the Bureau of Motor Vehicles. (My on-air time has been interrupted the past few months due to overtime, but I've been back two weeks now.)
Russ also has a real job like I do.
Other than News Director Michael Alwood, the other local on-air voices are all volunteers and interns.
In the very first book since the flip (winter 2007), the station scored a 0.5, tied with 1230. The numbers have moved up incrementally in the last two books to 0.6 and 0.8, respectively. But unlike 1230 in its progressive talk days, WVKO streams online.
And while the 12+ numbers may be irrelevant, one thing Elephant neglected to mention is TSL--Time Spent Listening--which factors in the number of listeners for at least five minutes in an Average Quarter Hour (AQH) and the number of unique listeners for at least five minutes in a given daypart (cume). 1230 had the highest TSL in the market when it was progressive talk (or so my sales rep there told me), and apparently the high TSL has moved with the format over our direction.
The local programming, especially on the weekends, has separated WVKO from 1230 in all its different formats since Jacor/Clear Channel took ownership. The station has not forgetten its roots and provides a variety of programs serving the Columbus African-American community on Sundays. It also offers a local talk show for the LGBT community and a nightly show sponsored by the
Columbus Free Press.
And since it began airing progressive talk, the number of local advertisers on WVKO has far exceeded the number on 1230 during progressive talk programming. However, the station has also been Columbus' home for high school sports from day one, as well as the home for Columbus Clippers baseball. We also carry Miami University and Ohio University football, and listeners have no problem in going to the web stream for their favorite shows when sports is on the air. They know sports can be a major cash cow that supports the rest of the programming.
Has it been smooth sailing? Not exactly. But when the station was in a financial pinch this past summer, listeners from all across the country provided the needed financial backing to get the station through the lean period.
Now that I have gotten everyone outside Columbus up to speed as WVKO is approaching its first anniversary as a progressive talker, a closed-circuit message to Elephant.
In my very first posts on this board, I was informed of the following in the Terms of Service:
You agree not to use the Service to:
(e) upload, post or otherwise transmit any Content that you do not have a right to transmit under any law or under contractual or fiduciary relationships (such as inside information, proprietary and confidential information learned or disclosed as part of employment relationships or under nondisclosure agreements);
(f) upload, post or otherwise transmit any Content that infringes any patent, trademark, trade secret, copyright or other proprietary rights of any party;
That's why I don't get into rating specifics other than what is posted in the Ratings section.