> > (Former) Oldies listeners will continue to listen...just
> not
> > to Oldies. They won't come back to Oldies....cause Oldies
> > isn't going to be an option.
> >
>
> You must of missed class that day this was taught. As people
> age they are set in their ways. Can't teach an old dog new
> tricks. It is a stat and shows in the research. Advertisers
> also need this. Older people int he majority will not listen
> to newer or different music as they age. Period.
>
> Also some of you MISS a major point. It is not the dismissal
> of the 54+ traditional oldies listener. The question is,
> there is no where for the mid 40's female to go to listen to
> Top 40 music from her heyday.
>
> Furthermore on a tangent, a lot have their heads in the sand
> and think the research is gospel. Radio listenership not
> going down? LOL, the new generation is busy listening to
> radio? Maybe as involunatary background noise. Thank
> computers, ipods, internet, P2P programs, satellite
> etc....... When the older gen is dying off, someone will
> have to replace them and it will not be the younger gen.
>
OK....Without degenerating into a shouting match, let me address your points...
1. Absolutely right. Proves my statement. Can't change listening habits...OR buying habits...UNTIL the option is taken away. Case in point: Driven any Packards lately? Studebakers? Deloreans? Plymouths? Did the people driving Oldsmobiles just decide to stop driving? No. Went to a different option. Or they take the bus (satellite radio.) Or they have the grandkids drive them (Internet and I-pods.) But they still get around.
2. There is a place where the 40-year old woman can get the music of her heyday...it's called AC radio. Mixes lots of old favorites with music from the 80s, 90s and today...wait, did I just hear a positioning statement in there somewhere?
3. Where do the younger gen. hear the music to download and decide if they like it? MTV? They don't play music. Ipod? Pay 99 cents to download something you've never heard? They get it from the radio, goofy. That's where they hear it, and THEN add it to their collection. It's there, it's free, and it's accessible without parental controls (cept for the pesky FCC.) Listenership down? Sure. But not out.
4. 80's Now.com? I like it. Good mix of 80's music. But shouldn't it be One Hit...All the Decade? (tongue firmly in cheek--I played them as currents.)
Thanks for the dialogue.
> not
> > to Oldies. They won't come back to Oldies....cause Oldies
> > isn't going to be an option.
> >
>
> You must of missed class that day this was taught. As people
> age they are set in their ways. Can't teach an old dog new
> tricks. It is a stat and shows in the research. Advertisers
> also need this. Older people int he majority will not listen
> to newer or different music as they age. Period.
>
> Also some of you MISS a major point. It is not the dismissal
> of the 54+ traditional oldies listener. The question is,
> there is no where for the mid 40's female to go to listen to
> Top 40 music from her heyday.
>
> Furthermore on a tangent, a lot have their heads in the sand
> and think the research is gospel. Radio listenership not
> going down? LOL, the new generation is busy listening to
> radio? Maybe as involunatary background noise. Thank
> computers, ipods, internet, P2P programs, satellite
> etc....... When the older gen is dying off, someone will
> have to replace them and it will not be the younger gen.
>
OK....Without degenerating into a shouting match, let me address your points...
1. Absolutely right. Proves my statement. Can't change listening habits...OR buying habits...UNTIL the option is taken away. Case in point: Driven any Packards lately? Studebakers? Deloreans? Plymouths? Did the people driving Oldsmobiles just decide to stop driving? No. Went to a different option. Or they take the bus (satellite radio.) Or they have the grandkids drive them (Internet and I-pods.) But they still get around.
2. There is a place where the 40-year old woman can get the music of her heyday...it's called AC radio. Mixes lots of old favorites with music from the 80s, 90s and today...wait, did I just hear a positioning statement in there somewhere?
3. Where do the younger gen. hear the music to download and decide if they like it? MTV? They don't play music. Ipod? Pay 99 cents to download something you've never heard? They get it from the radio, goofy. That's where they hear it, and THEN add it to their collection. It's there, it's free, and it's accessible without parental controls (cept for the pesky FCC.) Listenership down? Sure. But not out.
4. 80's Now.com? I like it. Good mix of 80's music. But shouldn't it be One Hit...All the Decade? (tongue firmly in cheek--I played them as currents.)
Thanks for the dialogue.