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![]() "Eric F. Richards" wrote in message ... "David Eduardo" wrote: ...and therein lies the problem. You aren't looking for listeners who buy -- you are looking for listeners who are densely packed. It ain't called "target-casting," it's "broadcasting." Radio and print and TV are mass media. They loolk for "people" and there is no way of knowing which ones are ready to buy. You are making assumptions about the ability to know the listener at the granular level, one by one. There is no economical way to do this. This is why ratings are a poll, not a census. Going into another medium, the direct mail response rate is seldome even 1% even with the most targeted mailing lists. Still, given cost, that is cost effective. the same is true with radio. Advertisers can narrow down choicdes by knowing the age appeal of thier product vs the appeal of stations, and select accordingly. Other than that, they really have little to deal with as to the desire to buy of the listeners of radio or one station as this may change from day to day or hour to hour. Boulder, etc., are in the Denver MSA. Now go to the FCC site and pull a coverage map for Denver based stations. Boulder is in a valley -- a signal hole, invisible to Lookout Mountain, where many Denver broadcasters live. They can't cover Boulder for crap. They can and do, however, cover all the way down to New Mexico. As I said before, each market only has a few, a very few, AMs that fully cover it. That goes for Denver, or Cleveland or LA. In fact, due to urban sprawl, Washington DC has not had a single viable AM in this respect for the last 30 years or so. Only those stations, like KOA, will be fully competitive because they cover the market. the rest willhave to figure out niche or brokered options to survive. Since we are talking about AM, and there are no AMs up on a frikkin' mountain, your whole point is bvery confusing. And no Denver FM covers down to New Mexico. You do know that the ideal AM site is in salt water, right? Lacking that, it is in the lowest, flattest, wettest, most orgnic soil possible. FMs and TVs love mountains of the 2000 foot creations of Stainless, but not AMs. Again we are talking about AM out of market skywave coverage. Coverage which, in Denver, exists on only one station... KOA. ...and we all know from personal experience that marketing always reflects reality, right? Yeah, it usually does. Which is why New Coke did so well, the Ford Edsel was a rip-roaring success, the Chevy Miata is hailed as a great move by GM and Robert Macnamara will go down in history as the greatest market researcher ever. It is telling that you had to go back 50 years for one of your examples. There are always misses. The case study for consumer research and being driven by the marketing mode is Procter & Gamble... they create hundreds of new products a year, actually test market a significant percentage (that means they make the product and distribute it in isolated markets to see how it does) and roll out dozens. Yet as many as half do not last 3 years. Consumer tastes change, and sometimes initial impressions do not create long term usage. This is why companies try to have many products under development. Oh, and no one reads the comic strip Dilbert, because its descriptions of corporate life are pure fantasy. Some are real, some are exaggerations. And many of us work in companies where none of that is true. Mostly,comic strips are exaggerations of real life. Good thing, too, because I bet that a seller -- that is, a buyer of advertising time -- on WLW knows how many units they move in East Overshoe, that place that doesn't exist in your world. But, even if they do get a listener or tow at night outside the Cicny MSA, they do not quantify the sales that way. They look at the sales by region and city and the local ad expenditures to determine effectiveness of the ad campaign. You are trying to quantify on a grand scale something that does not matter: night DX AM lisatening. You can go through the Arbitron diaries for east Overshoe (every US county is rated at least once a year) and you will not find that WLW gets ratings. So, statistically, it is not a factor even if in reality one or tow people listen occasionally. When you have, for example, 1.6 million listening to KFI in the LA market, the fact that maybe 3 or 4 people listened in Needles or Barstow or Bishop or somewhere way off in the wilderness is totally insignificant. Does not make a material change in eithe KFI or the people who hear ads on KFI. And, in most places in the Southwest, Mexican staiton interference has made the usefullness of clears on skywave pretty limited in the last few decades (KFI and KNX are unlistenable 150 miles from LA, for example) and in the Southeast, Cubans and caribbean stations chew up WSB and WLW and stations like that most nights of the year... another reason why these stations do not even try to serve out of market listener groups. In fact, the product was probably developed today by a company tha tis in marketing mode as opposed to the older production mode model. As such, the rpduct was designed with user input, and then marketed to the greatest potential users. That's true. But it doesn't affect how radio people intentionally misunderstand their audience. We do not misunderstand our daudiences We just have to, for economic reasons, ignore that portion that is not inside our own market metro. It's still a helluva way to run a railroad, no matter what you say about it. Your misunderstanding of the way radio is listened to is monumental, Um, no. *I* listen. Do you? Do you even know listeners, or do you only know the arbitron numbers, those that only reflect listeners "above a certain threshold" per ZIP code? I spend at least half my time in direct contact with listeners or supervising others who are. I travel between 17 US markets, and we see in person at least 10 thousand listeners a year, and talk to anoother 200,000 or more users of our "variety" of radio by phone, conducting interviews with all of them using a staff of about 50 an a budget that is about 6 times greater than the billing of the average radio station in the US. Yes, we know our listeners very well. Your methodology reminds me of an old joke about a physicist studying prime numbers: "1 doesn't count... 2 is prime, 3 is prime, 4 is... NOT prime, 5 is prime. 4 must be experimental error, therefore all integers are prime." Except that we do extensive field research on a monumental level. Your results remind me once again how detached marketing is from reality. Some years back, I got contacted by a telephone marketing survey, wanting to study people's opinions of US-West, now Qwest, the most wretched phone company I've ever had to deal with. Because they wanted hard, measurable data, they asked a series of yes-no questions about quest. Not a single question was asked about the quality or reliability of their service. Not one. After about 5 minutes of yes-no questions on total irrelevency, "In your opinion, have the operators at US-west been polite and friendly?" I said, nicely but in exasperation, "You haven't asked the right question yet." They never did. Irrelevant. Your experience with Quest and the purposes of the survey were at odds. Maybe the did not want to know your feelings, just your actual behaviour... in other words, don't tell me what you feel, tell me what you actually did. Union members supposedly reject the labor policies, offshoring and health care policies of WalMarth. Yet 70% of labor union members recently surveyed shopped at walMart despite that. In other words, a survey based on feelings would say labor union menbers despise WalMart. And it would not show that nearly all of them shop there anyway. You have to pin down real behaviour, not guesses. Consumers can tell you what they have done a lot better than what they will do... this is why historians are respected and fortune tellers are not. And neither do you. We do all the time. You just will never see proprietary research. and the basis for your failure to get the way advertising is bought. I get it. I get it just fine. Just like I "get" The Flat Earth Society. Radio is mostly listened to in the daytime. Sure -- drive time. What your next biggest listening period outside of rush hour? Listening is pretty flat form 6 AM to 7 PM. there are small peaks in 6 to 10 and 3 to 7, but they are minor. Since 70% of listening is at home or at work, the short in-car intervals are overwhelmed by in home and at work listening, where more time is available. In fact, in some makrets, like New York, less than 25% of listening is in cars! It is nearly 100% listened to in the very strongest signal contours of FM and AM stations. By your massaged, filtered numbers, yes. But you are filtering a large number of people out of your survey. They, to you, are down in the noise, in the insignificant digits range. But that "noise," added up, makes a significant bloc of people. I am not filtering anyone out. If you look at any station, and look at where the diary returns come from by work and home location, you find that most listening is inside the very prime contours. in metros, where AM noise levels are high, about 80% to 85% comes from within the 10 mv/m contours. On FM, it is within the 64 dbu contour. Very little is left outside those contours. Then you can check if your station showed up in any market area that is not your home market area. In the whole US, only a few hundred out of 13,500 radio stations showed up outside the home market. Arbitron is very liberal on what it takes to "show" in a market. You only have to appear in 10 diaries and register a certain number of quarter hours of listening to "show" yet, except for contiguous markets on groundwave for AM, AMs do not show in distant markets because there is just not anyone listening. Again, radio listening at night is about 4 times lower than daytime levels so the chances of finding listeners is much harder. Add to that the fact that there are very few stations on reasonably clear frequencies that can be reliably heard and listened to on skywave (the number is a few dozen out of 5000 AM stations) and all these staitons are programming to local audiences because that is where the big money comes from and you have no listeners of significance outside the groundwave coverage areas. Advertisers only use local stations to reach local audiences, Either because you won't sell them the time, or they are a local product (like a bar or a pizza joint), or, gawd help us all, they *believe* people like you. Buying is top down. Advertisers decide what ages, geographies, markets they will use. They tell their ad agency what to buy, and they determine the media mix. Radio simply provides the time. Radio will sell time to most anything legal. But I have never personally seen a single buy come down for skywave or out of market listeners in the last 45 years or so. Major advertisers advertise by the market. Their entire distribution system is generally regionalized by market and zone, and so are ad budgets. Even national media, like network TV and cable, is allocated by market based on population. as they depend on more than on air advertising as part of an ad buy, and out of town stations do not do merchandising, promotion or remotes or shows or club appearances or taste testings or mystery shopper promotions or whatever outside their own market where 99.999999999999% of their listeners are anyway. ...all of the above are irrelevent and gimmicery. I personally have never gone to see a remote. I certainly wouldn't, say, go buy a car based on a remote. But then, I consider myself to be above average intelligence -- maybe the below-average Joe or Jane *will* buy a car because KSUX is doing a remote at the local chevy outlet. The fact is, most ad buys include some type of merchandising or direct support services. It may be something you do not see, like letters to all retailers in a market area saying that Client So and So is advertising on my station, so you had better stock up and give the product good facings to satisfy increased demand... or a contest to give away samples... or cupons done at van hits... or an endorsement by talent... or something that enhances the ad buy and is purely localized. I can not send talent or vans or whatever to Moreno Valley. Doing so would take 8 hours, including travel time. I could do 4 hits in LA metro in the same time, and that benefits me. It is about logistics, signal and listening patterns. Oh, and, "99.999999999999%"? Are you sure? You referred to The LA staiton I referred to has over 1.2 million weekly listeners ...so a single listener not recorded by your beloved Arbitrons would be far more than the 0.000000000001% needed to break your percentage. I was engaging in the same hyperbole you are using. But you know that. Your station is a top 5 in a market it refuses to sell to. Because they don't exist, according to your beloved numbers. LA ad rates on major staitons are in the $1000 to $2000 per spot range. In Riverside / San Bernardino, the Inland Empire separate market, the local staitons sell for from $60 to a bit over $100 a spot. There is no way I can go in there and offer $2000 spots for the #5 station when the #1 staiton sells for $100 a spot. And that is why major metro stations do not sell in fringe markets, even if they cover them partly or fully. Once again, because I need to spell these things out for you, I'm not suggesting you sell bar X outside of your home market. But if you can place ads for companies that do mail order work, or are a chain, or otherwise aren't tied to a geographic element, why not do so? "Because we don't work that way," is a ****-poor answer. Almost all Mail Order is PI. We do not talke PI, as the returns are miserable and it is better to play more music or do more talk than to fill the staiton up with non-productive ads that detract fromt he entertainment value. Chain stores or national products buy ads through agencies. They buy by the market. If you are an LA station and mention Riverside ratings, they say, "but I am buying you for LA, not Riverside. When I buy Riverside, and you want to sell me more spots for $60, give us a ring." I reiterate: Thinking inside your tiny little box will probably doom traditional broadcast-band radio. Don't feel too bad, though, you have company: Clear Channel thinks that selling the most bland mush will keep radio going because it fits into their market surveys of what people want. Clear Channel and its component parts literally saved AM radio. In fact, the name of the company reflects on its first purchase, WOAI in San Antonio, a bankrupt AM. They expanded by buying good AMs even in places like Wyoming and Montana and putting on good talk programming and, for all practical purposes, creating or significantly contributed to the model that saved AM. |
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