gbt216 said:
Jason Roberts said:
radioman148 said:
Mark Jeffries said:
WhoDat! said:
want to win? as far as wls-fm...hey, its real Simple, give the people what They Want, Not WHAT you WANT them to have.
And who are "the people?" The over 55 audience that advertisers don't want?
From
http://chicagoradioandmedia.com/message-board:
Persons ages 25-54...
In the Classic Hits format battle between WLS-FM and WJMK-FM, K-Hits continues to win in this demo. WJMK-FM/104.3 K-Hits increased its share by .2 in the February period, now sitting at a 2.9 share, good enough for a tie at #14. WLS-FM also increased by a .2 share, but only has a 2.2 share now and sits at a tie for #20. In comparison, for the February 2012 ratings period, WLS-FM had a 3.9 share and was tied at #9, while WJMK-FM was #21 with a 2.2 share. In 2013, these two stations seem to be on opposite paths for the Persons 25-54 demographic.
So what this may indicate is that WLS-FM, in it's original 50's to 70's format got bigger numbers, but was most likely top heavy in "geezers". The music shift to a more "classic hits" posture most likely was brought about either by a fact that the demos they had were not necessarily producing the amount of revenue they wanted (or concern that they wouldn't be able to get it because of the top heavy "geezer" demo concentration).
Now today, both stations appear to be splitting the available 25-54 numbers, as, yes...some of the older audience has abandoned the new WLS-FM approach, though both stations have gained some listeners. (Not a surprise, since a new competitor tends to cause audience numbers to expand the format's available audience a bit.) And, even with a 2.2, WLS-FM's sales numbers might actually prove equal or better than when they had a 3.9 if those numbers were too top heavy with "geezers".
To our older readers: I mean no insult to you by calling the demo "geezers". I'm now in that demo, too.
That's the way the ratings and demo game works. Disagree if you like, but anyone with actual radio programming experience in working with radio and sales knows this to be true.
So what this all says to me is that ratings are irrelevant from a profit perspective and thus a more meaningful measure would be some sort of metric that reconciles advertiser sales resulting from the listening audience. In other words, my listening preferences are treated equally to the twenty and thirty something listeners in the way ratings are done currently, but to equate sales for advertsers, my listening preferences should be weighted less than a 20 or 30 something's listening preferences (I'm being semi-cynical in my observation). Therefore, WLS-FM need not worry about ratings in their current measuring form.
No...let me be clear:
The advertisers for radio don't care what people over 55 like, by and large. You (and me, too since I'm 57) are irrelevant to them, as least as far as advertising on radio goes.
Radio ads are clearly skewed to the under 55 crowd...most specifically targeted at 25-54 year olds, with the "sweet spot" for them being 35-44.
Since commercial radio has to make money, radio has no choice but to go along. Telling them about the buying power of the 55 plus-ers, the lifestyle changes, how much more active they are, means diddly squat to them.
A recent poster mentioned non-commercial radio should pick up these formats and frankly, I agree. I'm running an LP-FM that, right now anyway, has to invest leftover money into the station because we have a boatload of underwriters. Why? We're running a hybrid oldies format (50's to 80's) that does not ignore the early years music.
Oldies will still get a mass audience, even in small towns. It's just not the demographic advertisers desire. However, in non commercial broadcasting, you don't really need the demos as much as body count...i.e., people who will pay to support your programming.
That's where it needs to go.