dawg4life said:
Columbus is supposed to be the "hip" city in Ohio. Columbus has by far the best club scene in Ohio. And to top it off, Columbus has the largest university in the nation.
I'm a 35 year old white successful business owner that grew up in Columbus and I've always enjoyed and listened to hip hop/dance music. I also enjoy Classic Hits, Classic Rock, Active Rock, Some alternative, Standards and even Big Band. I CAN'T STAND COUNTRY MUSIC although I'm quite aware of how many people around here that do.
That being said, I don't know who the hell you radio guys are getting your research information from and why the hell you keep wasting your money on them? And please, who are these people that you're testing to see what kind of song tests well or not? Regardless, the fact remains that in a metropolis the size of Columbus that has so much to offer for some reason has THE WORST RADIO STATIONS IN THE COUNTRY for a city of it's size.
I've traveled to so many different major cities across the USA and I swear to you that 9 out of 10 times I've always said I wish Columbus had a station like this or a station like that.
But the fact remains, the more we bitch, the more it stays the same.
Granted, Dawg - radio is in the ear of the beholder. I've heard some decent and sometimes great radio in Columbus...and some crap, too.
And, I'll even agree the formatic choices of some of the stations in the area just completely mystify me. (Why make a rimshot country, for instance...when the reason WCOL went country in the first place in 1995 was because Columbus radio listeners were tired of rimshots with their lousy signals doing country? That's why WCOL got as big as it did as fast as it did!)
But your criticism of research...let me tell you. It works. You may not believe it. But it works. Stations are in the business to make money. Just look at why Pulse 87 went away in New York to be replaced by a more mainstream party station. Pulse wasn't making enough money. And just read how the "pulse" fans in NYC bitch, whine and moan about the New York market.
One caveat, though. Doing research doesn't help if you can't read it properly. And sometimes, that's happens. But, we get the research information from actual listeners. The panels are pre-screened. We know what stations those people listen to...and the questions are tailored to specific demographics and specific audiences. The listeners don't know they're talking to radio stations, either. I've worked at stations that did research and those that didn't. The ones who didn't were usually losers.