Full disclaimer: part of this will be a statement of my philosophy, part will be an unabashed sales pitch for my stations.
I have followed this board for a long time and for the most part it is a LPFM forum. But how has the LPFMers laid claim to "community radio"? What about the original "community radio", the Class IV AM's sprinkled around the country. These "local" stations were designed to serve the small towns with Class III, II, and finally 50kw Class I stations serving increasingly larger cities, states, and sections of the US. Granted, as towns got larger, bigger stations got bigger as clusters formed around urban areas, and of course FM finally gained a solid foothold, these small AMs began to fade away. But in the small, rural areas that many of the LPFM purists desire to serve, the "local, community oriented" AM station lives on. I know, I own two.
We air the things our residents could not get from big, distant signals from the "big city". PSA's, community bulletin board stuff for local churches, charities, etc., local high school sports (last heard in this community in 1999!), local weather, and more importantly, local NWS alerts for our county, not three counties away where the Big Stations live. Just a sample but you get the idea. LPFMers, sound like what you want to do with your station??
And when it comes time to pay the electric, phone, internet, local taxes and business licenses, legal and regulatory fees and the like, you dont have to hold your hand out or dig deep into your own pocket to pay for them! As a commercial station you can actually sell a few, or a lot, of spots to generate revenue to keep your station on the air. Is this selling out? Hardly. Actually it may be helping your local community because you can bet most small businesses in your community could not afford to buy spots on the biggies. So your $5.00 spots may actually be helping the local economy by allowing the corner furniture strore to run some ads and hopefully generate some more business for them, and keep that money in the community instead of the big city. Take a look at your local newspaper, either a daily or weekly. You can bet these very same merchants are buying ads there. Why limit yourself to "underwriting" type ads for peanuts? Trust me, money demands will dog you till the day you sell your station, or pull the plug. Dont forget maintenance and the never ending fees from the FCC and the Washington attorney you will need to keep you legal!
How about covering your community? Yes, 100 watts will cover most small towns, but what about out into the county? We have two 1000 watt stations in the middle of two adjacent counties. We simulcast them extending coverage pretty much throughout both counties (and a bit into the third adjacent county to the north) covering the tiny pockets of homes and subdivisions outside of town and of course the major highway that connects them.
You notice that I have not talked about format. This is irrelevant, we are talking about the delivery system here. You can have religious spoken word to polka music, whatever you felt was underserved in your community when you dreamed of your LPFM. For you LPFMers who only grew up with FM, dont totally dismiss AM. If you have the programming your communty wants, they will find you regardless of where on the dial you are on. I admit AM will be a little harder sell, but remember that the premise of Sirius and other specialty format providers is that if they give you the niche format you want you will actually buy a special receiver and pay money to hear it!!!
There was another poster here that suggested buying AM stations but dont think he followed his own advice. I had a business plan that I actually executed and am pretty pleased with the way it turned out. So why am I looking to sell? I had a conversation with another well know poster on this board, and huge LPFM advocate, and we both had seemed to come to similar realiztions, we are getting old! What would happen to my stations if something were to happen to me? I dont want to think about that scenario, of the burden that would be placed on my wife. Well, like I said, I accomplished what I set out to do. So I would like to pass these stations along to someone else who has the same vision I do and continue serving the community. Will they get rich? No, I didnt, but the bills got paid. And I enjoy tinkering with my stations every day.
So bottom line, LPFM has not cornered the "community radio" franchise. Community radio is what the owner makes it. Community radio is still alive in many communities and opportunities abound for radio entreprenours who want to get on the air now, not sitting aroound waiting for the "window". (BTW, look at recnet and see how long it has taken some stations from window to actual getting on the air, you will be shocked).
Now the ad: two AM stations for sale in a great area noted for its recreational opportunities. Real estate included with plenty of land to build on if you wish. Turn key operation. PM me for details.
I have followed this board for a long time and for the most part it is a LPFM forum. But how has the LPFMers laid claim to "community radio"? What about the original "community radio", the Class IV AM's sprinkled around the country. These "local" stations were designed to serve the small towns with Class III, II, and finally 50kw Class I stations serving increasingly larger cities, states, and sections of the US. Granted, as towns got larger, bigger stations got bigger as clusters formed around urban areas, and of course FM finally gained a solid foothold, these small AMs began to fade away. But in the small, rural areas that many of the LPFM purists desire to serve, the "local, community oriented" AM station lives on. I know, I own two.
We air the things our residents could not get from big, distant signals from the "big city". PSA's, community bulletin board stuff for local churches, charities, etc., local high school sports (last heard in this community in 1999!), local weather, and more importantly, local NWS alerts for our county, not three counties away where the Big Stations live. Just a sample but you get the idea. LPFMers, sound like what you want to do with your station??
And when it comes time to pay the electric, phone, internet, local taxes and business licenses, legal and regulatory fees and the like, you dont have to hold your hand out or dig deep into your own pocket to pay for them! As a commercial station you can actually sell a few, or a lot, of spots to generate revenue to keep your station on the air. Is this selling out? Hardly. Actually it may be helping your local community because you can bet most small businesses in your community could not afford to buy spots on the biggies. So your $5.00 spots may actually be helping the local economy by allowing the corner furniture strore to run some ads and hopefully generate some more business for them, and keep that money in the community instead of the big city. Take a look at your local newspaper, either a daily or weekly. You can bet these very same merchants are buying ads there. Why limit yourself to "underwriting" type ads for peanuts? Trust me, money demands will dog you till the day you sell your station, or pull the plug. Dont forget maintenance and the never ending fees from the FCC and the Washington attorney you will need to keep you legal!
How about covering your community? Yes, 100 watts will cover most small towns, but what about out into the county? We have two 1000 watt stations in the middle of two adjacent counties. We simulcast them extending coverage pretty much throughout both counties (and a bit into the third adjacent county to the north) covering the tiny pockets of homes and subdivisions outside of town and of course the major highway that connects them.
You notice that I have not talked about format. This is irrelevant, we are talking about the delivery system here. You can have religious spoken word to polka music, whatever you felt was underserved in your community when you dreamed of your LPFM. For you LPFMers who only grew up with FM, dont totally dismiss AM. If you have the programming your communty wants, they will find you regardless of where on the dial you are on. I admit AM will be a little harder sell, but remember that the premise of Sirius and other specialty format providers is that if they give you the niche format you want you will actually buy a special receiver and pay money to hear it!!!
There was another poster here that suggested buying AM stations but dont think he followed his own advice. I had a business plan that I actually executed and am pretty pleased with the way it turned out. So why am I looking to sell? I had a conversation with another well know poster on this board, and huge LPFM advocate, and we both had seemed to come to similar realiztions, we are getting old! What would happen to my stations if something were to happen to me? I dont want to think about that scenario, of the burden that would be placed on my wife. Well, like I said, I accomplished what I set out to do. So I would like to pass these stations along to someone else who has the same vision I do and continue serving the community. Will they get rich? No, I didnt, but the bills got paid. And I enjoy tinkering with my stations every day.
So bottom line, LPFM has not cornered the "community radio" franchise. Community radio is what the owner makes it. Community radio is still alive in many communities and opportunities abound for radio entreprenours who want to get on the air now, not sitting aroound waiting for the "window". (BTW, look at recnet and see how long it has taken some stations from window to actual getting on the air, you will be shocked).
Now the ad: two AM stations for sale in a great area noted for its recreational opportunities. Real estate included with plenty of land to build on if you wish. Turn key operation. PM me for details.