DavidEduardo said:landtuna said:I would agree with you if the stopsets were similar in length to those of 30 years ago. Today the stopset can be expected to approach 5-6 minutes. For me and a ton of others that is a mandatory push of the pre-set.
While logic would seem to validate your point, reality contradicts it.
http://www.americanradiohistory.com/Archive-Arbitron/What Happens When The Spots Come On.pdf
The tune out for a really bad song is much more severe.
Unlike commercials there is a lot of variety in like/dislike of songs so what constitutes a "really bad song" and how does that differ from a "not so bad song" etc.? But putting that esoteric comparison aside for the moment.....
The report uses an average of 9 minutes of commercial time per hour. My experience on two stations in my market is more than that. I submit the stopset is more like 5-6 minutes each and that are at least three of them per hour.
It matters if people are listening in a car or at work. If in a car they are much more likely to hit the pre-set than if at work and are listening only casually. Also, you cannot tell if the listener is actually listening to their radio or not. All you can determine is that the radio was playing and the meter was within earshot.
One item completely lacking in the report was retention. When the average station plays half a dozen commercials back to back what is the retention by "listeners"? Common sense and personal experience tell me it is practically nil.
This report was produced by a company whose very existence depends upon the sale of commercials. I would be much more willing to concede the point if the survey was performed by a third party without a vested interest in the outcome.