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Buffalo WKSE Morning show

On the other hand, if you're working in a smaller market, you're likely making less money, and this is a promotion.

This isn't an oldies or classic hits station where they're looking for heritage established talent. They want someone in the demo, preferably in their late 20s, who has a lot of energy, and has built up a fan base somewhere. You don't think making $70K plus benefits is enticing to someone in their 20s? The big deal here is getting paid insurance, because that's not always a given.

Salaries in radio today are based on billings. So this is insight into how much the station bills. They're not going to pay the talent more than the show itself bills. However, if the talent improves the billings, there's potential to make more money. Starting salary is low until they see what you deliver.
 
On the other hand, if you're working in a smaller market, you're likely making less money, and this is a promotion.

This isn't an oldies or classic hits station where they're looking for heritage established talent. They want someone in the demo, preferably in their late 20s, who has a lot of energy, and has built up a fan base somewhere. You don't think making $70K plus benefits is enticing to someone in their 20s? The big deal here is getting paid insurance, because that's not always a given.

Salaries in radio today are based on billings. So this is insight into how much the station bills. They're not going to pay the talent more than the show itself bills. However, if the talent improves the billings, there's potential to make more money. Starting salary is low until they see what you deliver.
Salaries are not based on billings. Salaries are based on where a company wants its margins to be. A top billing station will look at a big salary as taking away from its profit and margin.

Currently, the radio is not in the getting revenue mode, it’s in the cutting mode. The revenue mode is much harder, the cutting mode is easier
 
Salaries are not based on billings. Salaries are based on where a company wants its margins to be. A top billing station will look at a big salary as taking away from its profit and margin.

Currently, the radio is not in the getting revenue mode, it’s in the cutting mode. The revenue mode is much harder, the cutting mode is easier
The "cutting mode" has a rock bottom where you've cut and saved all you can save and likely ruined your product, whereas the "getting revenue mode" has a ceiling that is dictated by the creativeness and resourcefulness of it's sales/programming departments.
 
The "cutting mode" has a rock bottom where you've cut and saved all you can save and likely ruined your product, whereas the "getting revenue mode" has a ceiling that is dictated by the creativeness and resourcefulness of it's sales/programming departments.

Then again, once you've gone through bankruptcy, and the company founder & his son are gone, you know what the mode is.
 
Can we assume the salary range doesn't include possible endorsement deals? If the talent is strong, there can be good money for themselves, the account exec and the station.

It likely doesn't include a lot of things. It's a starting salary. Everything is negotiable.

It's a 5 hour a day job. The rest of the day, you're either playing golf or watching TV. Lots of spare time to use your voice to make money.

I know morning shows that do the between-period entertainment at hockey games. They get paid for that.
 
The salary range is an indication of how much the vulture capitalists who now own Audacy value talent. I'm sure that they're looking at the total cost of the morning show, and Nicholas Picholas has been there for a long time. Then there's Wease, right? Don't be surprised if the new show becomes a duo. There's a lot of that going around these days.
 
On the other hand, if you're working in a smaller market, you're likely making less money, and this is a promotion.

This isn't an oldies or classic hits station where they're looking for heritage established talent. They want someone in the demo, preferably in their late 20s, who has a lot of energy, and has built up a fan base somewhere. You don't think making $70K plus benefits is enticing to someone in their 20s? The big deal here is getting paid insurance, because that's not always a given.

Salaries in radio today are based on billings. So this is insight into how much the station bills. They're not going to pay the talent more than the show itself bills. However, if the talent improves the billings, there's potential to make more money. Starting salary is low until they see what you deliver.
Really don't have any need to read after this comment _ nailed it.
 


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