del_griffith said:
Not an owner by any stretch, but small signal or signal impared AM's seem to do better outside of metro areas. And a little distance doesn't hurt either. Wouldn't it be better to leave it be a small town operation?
Good question. IF the small town is so far out it cannot be reached by the signals of stations in larger markets, it will do well. I know that the above comment made for a horrible sentence...
It always been my theory that people will gravitate to the station that broadcasts from the larger town/city, if they can receive it.
If your living in Middletown and have a choice, i think most will gravitate to the Cincinnati stations. This has be exacerbated by the amount of syndicated content that most stations air AND that most people commute to work in the larger city/town. They want to know what is going on, where they work.
Its why Arbitron took Lapeer County away from Flint and gave it to Detroit. The back story is that Lapeer is 18 minutes from the city of Flint and 55 minutes from Detroit. Nonetheless, those folks are more linked to Detroit.
That does change if the little, local station is relevant to those that live in the community. I hate to give another Detroit analogy ...
WHMI is closer to Lansing than Detroit. However, the county it is in is in the Detroit DMA. This is a Class A FM that in no way covers the Detroit market. You can receive all of the Detroit and Lansing signals in the county. Bottom line? They are local, REALLY LOCAL. Formatted Classic Rock and the thing KILLS in the county ARB and shows in the Detroit book. It shows better than a few of the Detroit stations which means that it really has to pull big numbers in its county. WHMI does get a boost from being an FM. But, its a puny FM signal.