This industry is about manking money in the quickest way possible, but the money stays with the executives and shareholders rather than the ones actually doing the work except the sales people. They are treated like gods and whatever they do everyone in the station must follow period. It's the programming department that makes what the client wants happen and yet the programming department is always viewed as the first area to cut in jobs not sales or management. In fact there needs to be more people in the programming department. Sometimes one person cannot do it all. Production, voicetracking, remotes, board oping the game, scheduling, updating the website, etc. but too many station managers and owners think they can and thus the on-air product is suffering and therefore the listeners are moving on to other means.
Radio will be around for a while because it can provide what other media can't in times of disaster. The very information that the public needs. Take what happened in the aftermath of Katrina. Acording to one report I read more people got their information (in the affected areas) from radio than they did TV, internet, or newspaper - combined. That has a lot to say about a failing industry. That said yes the good talent is leaving or rather being forced out of the industry because of the micromanagemant and other issues. But radio has the one thing that sat radio ro the internet - localisim. Have more locally orented programming on. Bring school kids in to give a report on what's going on in their school and who will be listening - their parents and friends. This will bring in money as these people will ultimately shop at your sponsors. Radio needs to listen to its customers the listeners they are probably you greatest customer even ahead of the clients who advertise on your statio, but without both you just have an x-wattage jukebox. It's all about pleasing the clients and not listening to the listeners. Why not please the listensers for a change?