And thank you to everyone who has posted here...I think you're showing people who are on these boards the honest truth about the financial side of radio and, in these most recent posts, why the challenges of making an AM station work in markets this size is so tough...
Let's face it: Though I agree with the notion that a "local" station could succeed in a "local" market by being "hyper local", you still have to consider the community in which you're talking.
Middletown still does have some "local" businesses. But are they enough in number to keep you afloat, or turn a profit? As the migration of Cincinnati northward has progressed (and even a bit of Dayton southward), many businesses in the areas of Warren and Butler counties are franchise operations who all use ad agencies to place their ad campaigns. And, many of your car dealers around these parts use in house or regional agencies. Saying to these clients, "Buy us because we're the local station", ain't enough to cut it. You have to back it up with ratings numbers.
So that means, at the very least, you're going to need to buy the county breakouts from Arbitron and show some people 25-54 are listening to you. And...not too top heavy 50 plus. Lately, WPFB-AM has been airing classic country which tends to attract mostly men over age 55...not too demographically compatible. (It's "oldies" syndrome with twang..)
OK, so let's assume, hypothetically, you're going to play a Classic Hits (think a 60's,70's pop format with a few 80's thrown in for spice) format, but lean on your news and information commitment. But then you're looking at hiring an experienced News Director, and at least one full time and, perhaps a part-time reporter/anchor. (That's about what WKFI-AM had in Wilmington back in the 1970's.). That might work if...you hire no DJ's. That's right. No DJ's...simply a Program Director to do a morning show who is also the Production Director. Maybe you have a part-time person do dubs in the afternoon once you're up and rolling.
Now, we're at 3 full time and at least a couple part-timers. Add 2 or 3 salespeople, an Office Manager who does the logs and billing, a GM who probably also has to sell. Plus upkeep, utilities, music licensing fees, etc. Suddenly, that $14 thousand a month debt service looks pretty huge. And, no...sorry...local high school sports by and of itself won't crack the nut you need to be profitable. (Though I agree it would have to be part of your equation regardless of format.)
OK, how about a talk format? I think WPFB-AM tried that. The problem is: with so many stations in the area (think WHIO, WLW, and WKRC) airing what is called the "top tier" of talk, you're going to be relegated to the second tier talkers or less. Their ratings success is marginal when you have the big talkers available in your market.
Middletown is simply no longer an "oasis" of its' own as it once was. It's now a bedroom community to either of the two cities nearby you'd care to assign it to. So anything you do would have to stand out..and that means a professional staff at professional salaries...professionally done and imaged.
And remember, few under 50 listen to AM radio. Which makes it all dicier.
Perhaps if some philanthropist who believed in local radio with the capital to try it and spend enough to make it work for three to five years (losing money for at least 2 or 3 of those years)...maybe. (But, that's a big maybe.) But, it's an iffy proposition at best.
And 1.5 million to buy the station? Keep dreaming, NKU...