Take a look at the ratings for Charlotte. Why are there so many Spanish stations when they don't have ratings?
Agreed. Greenville, SC can't even support one Spanish station on FM. I don't think it even shows.Mike Sheridan said:Bottom line: The numbers aren't there for Spanish formats.
I think most of the Spanish broadcasters with LMAs approach it more like time-brokers than traditional broadcasters. They look at their all-schedule LMA as a service to the community, and they're Spanish-language-oriented, so they do Spanish. They sell their programming based on their link to the community, not the numbers, like most small-town stations should probably do.Mike Sheridan said:I think you have the concepts mixed up. Brokered is when a Church, or someone with a product to advertise buys a block of time. Then ratings do not matter since the customer is buying the time. Some of the Spanish stations are doing a LMA (Local Marketing Agreement) then they buy all the time on the station, run their own programming and sell commercials based on the ratings for their station.
Mike Sheridan said:Bottom line: The numbers aren't there for Spanish formats.
tropicanamedia said:The talk about how Arbitron measures continues… Charlotte as well as other markets in North Carolina lost the HDHA, and that is one reason that the Spanish ratings are so low. Also, now they are using a combination of diaries and cell phone. And by the way remember that only about 7-8% of the residents in the metro are Hispanics. Also remember that the winter book is one of the smallest and have less Counties surveyed.
Atticus said:I'm wondering if money behind all the Spanish formats might not be drug related.
DavidEduardo said:Mike Sheridan said:Bottom line: The numbers aren't there for Spanish formats.
And in smaller Hispanic markets, the ratings are not a key to sales. First, retail (local direct) is not as ratings dependent, and tends to measure results. Because Spanish dominant Hispanics have fewer media choices in markets like Charlotte, the Spanish langauge radio stations are well-used... so many advertisers see good results. Second, SPanish dominants tend to be unreachable on general market stations, so advertisers can discover a "new market" when they advertise in Spanish.
Mike Sheridan said:I can't wait for PPM. It just might show that many people have gone to satellite, CD's and mp3's.
Mike Sheridan said:If that holds true for Spanish formats it should also hold true for other formats. Selling local direct other formats is something that I have maintained is possible and you have discounted. The shoe now is on the other foot! Clearly 7% of the population can't support 7 radio stations.
turkeydance said:atticus.....no more calls please.
finally, you had the guts to post
the reality. in order to 'launder' the
money, buy radio and funnel the
proceeds. c'mon folks....this is just
like the convenience store ATM.
"why do they sell so many lighters?"
I was amazed to see WNOW show up in the Triad ratings.Atticus said:I'm wondering if money behind all the Spanish formats might not be drug related. There's a vast fortune of money being made in drug trafficing to Mexico and other countries south of the border. They've got to have something to invest in. I know in the GSO market, LaPreciosa was making good money and CC might have made a big mistake by letting that format go. Where IS all that money coming from, anyway?
Atticus said:Not insinuating that Hispanics are all involved in drugs. However, I know a lot of money is being made by drug lords and wouldn't be surprised if they were investing it in American radio.