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#11
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David Eduardo wrote:
"D Peter Maus" wrote in message ... I found him real easy to work for, though. He's very clear about his expectations. You meet them. He doesn't care how, as long as it's ethical. His expectations are VERY high. But, then, so are his rewards. That's a dream job, compared to some I've had. A friend was one of his major PDs. But he left, and Mel was upset. A few years later, my friend, who I will call Bill Smith, was on an elevator at NAB when Mel got on. Mel turns to a person who was with him, and says, "I would swear Bill Smith was on this elevator. But that can't be. Bill Smith is dead, so he can't be here." The door opened, Mel got off and my friend broke into laughter. Yes, that's a common scenario, with Mel Karmazin. I have never had any discussion either in-house or with members of the industry committee, about pay channels. I think nearly all of us see that associating "pay" with terrestrial radio is a mistake. While the discussion may have come up, I never saw it progress. Most of us believe that splitting the HD digital FM in two offers great quality (absolutely marvelous, in fact, compared to iPod and satellite channels) and the ability to market new free channels. I actually disagree with you about the mistake of pay terrestrial radio. And so do others in the biz. Truth is, that subscription radio, whether it be the baseband channel, or one of the alternates, may be the only way to create viability for some formats that are not supportable through traditional advertising. I just don't think they will be on AM and FM. The problem is that the niche formats, after the major ones are covered, do not get sizable local audiences, even to justify subscription based concepts. Thi sis where satellite works. take a format that attracts 500 listeners in the average metro, and you have 250 thousand listeners in the top 50 cities in the USA... or 125 thousand in the top 50 markets. With that, you can do very good programming, as it is the equivalent of a #1 station in LA or NY. But market by market, is is the equivalent of a no-show, and not enough subscriber revenue to support it. My GM, for instance, desperately wanted to create a viable blues format. (Imagine, the Blues not viable in Chicago...but there it is). He could never get the perceptual data to support it. But subscription radio would have made that possible. Just as a number of the niche formats on XM and Sirius, now. I just do not se blues just for Chicago working Not enough subscribers. But nationally, very viable format. \ XM does some nice things with blues, actually, and here, that is to say, satellite, getting back to a thread past, is where a national audience can be built and a few listeners here and there become a sizeable contingent, yes, I agree. They can also be quantized, and made salable. What doesn't work for radio locally, does with satellite reach. It's also a subscription based delivery system. There is a different model on the business side than local radio. Now, on the other side of that, Karmazin believed the ratings/revenue relationship to be more myth than reality in the presence of REAL sales people. He preached it regularly. That the only thing needed to overcome weak ratings is more sales people, who could then create demand within an single station. Even driving rates up the card. And the 30+ sales ducks we had on staff were a testament to that. And he believed that any station that couldn't convert at a minimum of 200% needed an new Sales Mangler. We routinely converted at 200% and above. There are fewer and fewer cases of this... there is a finite revenue base in each market, and as one staiton overconverts share to revenue (power ration) the others wake up and do the same thing, and it levels out. There is no "undiscovered" revenue in any market. That's exactly right. But if you get in there with a team of hired assassins, you can pull it off. If only at one or two stations in a market, and only for a short period of time, in most cases. Some formats, Country Music being one of them, where overconversion is less difficult to achieve and maintain. But it requires a ratings independent sales pitch, which, often, we had to do. So, though, it's a good bet that subscription terrestrial radio is bad idea, questionable at best, it's not entirely a settled issue. Out of the box thinking can make pay radio happen, and clever execution can make it work. Especially, where there is little advertiser support. I'd love to do some of these formats, well (not like XM, which is a bunch of juke boxes, mostly) but with real talent and real PDs doing one format... but on WiMax. If there is a system where you can "push star 113 for blues" this will work. If we have to type in URLs, it will not. You ever get to put this into practice, I'll come out of retirement for it. (One of Karmazin's other bone deep beliefs is that every service pay for itself. No one gets subsidized. And if it can pay for itself, it can profit. In that aura, pay radio is an eventual certainty.) I think this was true in one window in time. In some cases,using one station to protect or widen the moat makes another more profitable, so they, collectively, do well. I did that back in the 60's, where I always tried to have a spare station to use as the alligator in the moat to protect my big stations from competiton. For those unfamiliar, consolidation is a very old concept outside the US, going back into the 50's in places like Mexico. I had a large cluster in Ecuador, built in the mid 60's... 4 AMs and 5 FMs in one market. It's still going on today. Bonneville is the major example here. WTMX is the cash cow. WDRV goes after the demo that WTMX can't get. Together, they do well. Not exactly blowing holes in the dial, but they do quite well. And everyone pays for themselves. At CBS, we all had numbers to hit, both revenue and profit. No one got subsidized. And the notion that everyone pays for themselves isn't new. Tisch did it at CBS, when he declared that the News division was to be profitable, and put it under Entertainment. With the spectre of HDTV on the horizon, Karmazin as much as declared that there would be subscription based alternative services delivered with stolen bandwidth from the HDTV main channel. An announcement that was followed by NBC and Time Warner. This when HDTV was approved but prior to the first implementation. Now that Karmazin is gone, there may be different cultures in place, but the boys running the show are sharp, and revenue enhancing opportunities are tough to pass up. Especially, as you point out, radio or television, shares, and revenue are finite. As far as quality goes...that's a better marketing point than it is a broadcast reality. Everyone talks about quality, and everyone has a standard, but where quality is defined as absolute faithfulness to the original material, it's failed everytime. If you use the tone control, on your car radio, you're not that interested in high quality. If you have an equalizer on your audio system....you get the picture. Just look at the amazing percentage of listeners to FM who do not listen in stereo... it is about good sound and good programming together. Hey, I listen to an iPod while biking, and we know what that quality is... Absolutely. We discussed this very point a year or more ago. Quality is a factor only when content is widely available from more than one source. But the notion of quality is subjective. And highly personal. HD Quality is, and will be, perceptual and personal. Right now, it's being presented at its optimum. That will change. Stealing bandwidth will begin. And look straight into your monitor and tell me you can name 5 engineers who can resist the temptation to 'tweak' their audio. Name me 5 more who don't believe they can 'improve' it. In all fairness, engineers who know their stuff get a panel together when tweaking and adjust the audio for a compromise sound for a range between cheap and good radios, so that all can hear the station nicely. Which was the situation with the Optimod. But you've worked with more engineers than I have. You know the percentage who really do know their stuff. Sturgeon's Law applies. 99% of them are crap. The Quality pitch is temporary. Once HD is established, and there is a significant user base, the whole 'quality' issue will no longer be mentioned, except to say 'digital quality.' Which is what they say about Sirius and XM...and some of that is pretty ratty. I am not pitching quality, I am pitching digital. We know that there is sucky digital, but it is a buzz word. Whatever works. Exactly my point. And it does work. There is no argument there. Since there are only 100 shares in any market, there will be no expansion of radio listening, but there may be a slowing of any erosion. At the same time, selling today is about clusters and combos, not single stations for the most part... so having more specifically targeted stations will definitely help. Low spillage and finely honed targets get better rates than broad, vague targets, as sports AMs demonstrate. No question. And HD formats will be, as cluster formats are now, selected strategically, to protect the cash cow, and mop up any periphery. Likely to be sold in unwired combo packages. With lip service paid to innovative and alternative programming. At least in the short term. Some of the new HD 2 formats are very clever, and others make up for what we would have done if we had 5 instead of 4 statins in a market. In essence, the formats are picked in descending order of audiencepotential, with attention given to potential for taking your competitor's lunch a the same time. And at least for the time being, you may indeed see a slowing of erosion. New, exciting toys, with fresh options for things not commonly heard. But as XM did recently, gutting a number of the channels I enjoyed, and replacing the music I preferred to hear with things that are more 'salable' and adding commercials to some music channels, eventually terrestrial and HD will fall into the same patterns as terrestrial radio exhibits, today. Only in a static world. All broadcasters arelearning that there is a much lower commercial load that will hold listeners, and there is better understanding of listeners. That will enhance the experience as product is re-emphasized. I do hope you're right. But my optimism is pretty thin, there. Especially since, as I've pointed out here, there is little radio serving me anymore. And I am one of it's true believers. The pith, here, is this statement: "Since there are only 100 shares in any market, there will be no expansion of radio listening, but there may be a slowing of any erosion." With evermore options for listening, and fractionalization of the listenership into potentially thousands of niches, eventually, programming offerings are going to have to be sold in combinations. Many are now. Clusters sell together for national and regional, mostly. And lots do combos locally. It will increase. Actually quite large clusters of programming issues. That means that programming offernings, whether on the baseband or the HD's, will have to fit into certain packageable categories. Since the target demos essentially do not change, and the maximum share is 100%, The total numbers are fixed. Competition will have to be within the existing numbers. Robbing Peter to pay Paul, as it were. Combo programming packages will have to be selected, or created, with some target demo participation. To remain salable in that context, some alternatives will be too far off the target to be salable, in favor or more mainstream, salable content. Not necessarily. Efficient targets get better rates So targeting that is as precise as magazines can be obtained, and advertisers pay more for less spillage. More channels, less revenue per channel. More channels, less expense per channel. Unless we use HD2 to develop very good regional or national concepts, those that will work bess by summing stations to pay for better talent and staff. Now that has some interesting potential. To bring things nearly full circle...with national, networked or not, channels with reach and intent beyond the local contour. That would be an exciting development. Which is the point. Because after all, in the US, Radio is ALWAYS about the money. That is and has been correct since about 1921. Damned straight. |