allenv said:
To say an 8,000 song playlist is a huge mistake is simply your opinion.You are not in the Eastern NC Market..Broad programming philosophies don't always apply to every market.You can't sit 3,000 miles away and tell me what Bill is doing is a mistake. I would not question your programming because the same applies to me.Until you've fought the battles in this market you are not qualified to offer anything but opinions and that's cool. That's what this board is based on. None of us have all the answers but we have something in common we love radio.The tone of your post come across as holier than thou and you know it all and rest of us are stupid...Just sayin.' Again I don't know you from Adam. Its tough to share ideas and opinions with someone who already knows it all..This will be my last post of this nature & I hope you see the point I'm trying to make.
I've inadvertently made a career out of playing the right number of songs when a competitor is playing too many. And I know many other programmers in markets big and small who have the same experiences.
I've done research in some markets as small as Albany, GA, Dothan, AL, Panama City, FM and Tallahassee, FL and in markets bigger than New York City. In all cases, the number of "playable" songs varies by format, not by market size.
A country station in the smallest researchable market (meaning a market that can afford the cost of a $30,000 music test) and one in a Top 10 market will both find about the same number of playable songs. Thus there is no leap of faith in saying that similar conditions would prevail in all markets, irrespective of size.
That's why successful traditional AC stations all play about the same number of songs, Country stations have fairly comparable library size, classic hits stations have similar song counts and so on.
I've also made sort of a career out of decimating stations where management believed that their market was different. Whether it be El Paso or Dothan or Karachi, stations that use "local differences" as an excuse for not following good radio practices always succumb to stations that do.
A corollary to the "my market is different" is "that can't be done here". I've seen many opportunities missed by folks who believed that well researched ideas would not work because "I know my market and you are from outside the market and are an idiot..."