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![]() "Nickname unavailable" wrote in message ... On Jul 13, 11:07 pm, "David Eduardo" wrote: "dave" wrote in message Because there are lots of good stations in each market, and the average listener uses 4 or 5 of them regularly. We use prizing as an incentive to those interested in such things to keep them tuned to us and not another station they like. yet, they are losing market share to the net, where you can find what you want. this is tiring, of course a conservative toon will try to wear you down no matter what is reality. No, actual facts will wear down false impressions that can not be documented. Actually, those of us who actually talk to lots of listeners know that the erosion of radio Time Spent Listening started in the late 80's, well before the Internet was an issue. And there has been no erosion of the number of people who use radio... it is constant in the 94% to 95% range as it has been since the 60's when Arbitron began. Why is total listening time down somewhat? There are lots more leisure time "competitors" starting in the 80's with additional channels on cable, then going into video games, increases in the average American's work hours, etc. There are about 120 million active game consoles in the US, per the consumer electronics association, and gamers are not listening to radio. Then there are DVDs, video on demand, internet browsing, the emphasis on fitness, and there are all kinds of things that ding total time spent listening to radio. It is not streaming alone and it is not iPods... in fact, several of the other options are much more impactful. Try doing a 600 person perceptual study of the audience of one station or format, and ask about leisure time activities and time allocations, and you will see that the internet is only a fraction of the issue. Hell, calling plans with free night minutes and free long distance at any time take as much time away from radio in younger demos as streaming. |
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