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To compete, a radio station must occupy a singular position in the mind of the Listener. For a radio station to succeed, the Listener must realize one clear benefit.
5 Steps to Posturing the Station for Success ‘Pick a target, pick a hill.’ As imperative as identifying the target Listener, is the value of point-of-purchase marketing. By reaching out to the Listener at the time and place she’s most inclined to use your product, you stand to most effectively influence her listening behavior. E-mail, telemarketing and direct mail messages delivered to the workplace are particularly effective for driving on-air and online consumption of AC radio. Bright, Tight, Brief, Real & Resonant An external marketing focus can’t triumph without a corresponding internal discipline. Everything that happens on the air should score high marks in five basic principles: What Do Women Want? A landmark study by BrandChamps for Meredith Publishing revealed the three experiences the Listener wants--and needs: When crafting each promotion and each marketing message for an AC station, appeal to at least one of these needs. 'Surf, Sun & Sand': What Are Your Colors? A Listener may only give you 15 minutes to touch her emotions. Wisely, the programmer strives to make each quarter-hour a musical microcosm of the station: a representative balance of styles, eras, tempos and textures. A more engaging and visceral approach begins with considering the experience the station should offer the Listener. In Miami, it’s analogous to a day at the beach--where the three key ingredients are the surf, the sun and the sand. Associating those elements with three primary colors--blue, tangerine and taupe--not only provides the station with a consistent palette and design platform, but even becomes a template for the music-scheduling philosophy. The core sound of the station--50% of the library--is coded ‘surf’. Another 25% of each category is the happier, poppier (usually more uptempo) ‘sun’ titles. And 25% is ‘sand’--the edgier, slightly harder tunes. Song sets are balanced to avoid direct transitions from ‘tangerine’ to ‘taupe’, always flowing through a ‘blue’ title to reinforce the station’s musical essence. Ratings Drive Rates...Drive Revenue The successful radio programmer has always possessed an amalgam of attributes: attention to detail; a good ear for music and other program product; technical and production skills; awareness of emerging technologies; a mastery of the marketplace--both statistically and emotionally. The successful Program Director tempers this show business sense with a bottom-line sensibility. One important quality is the ability to maintain an understanding of, and positive relationship with the sales engine. My aunt, a career broadcaster herself, gave me sage advice 30 years ago which remains the foundation of my fiscal and operational philosophy: ‘Watch the pennies and the dollars will take care of themselves.’
‘The role of the Manager is facilitator, expediter, barrier-destroyer, diffuser of good news.’ ‘You can think in black & white, and still imagine a zebra.’ When belts tighten and resources dwindle, innovation and creativity become essential to maximizing the station’s marketing investment. Growing up around pressmen, I learned the least expensive printed piece to produce is one color--black ink--on white paper. Yet consider one of the most exotic animals on the planet: The zebra is, essentially, a ‘one-color job’--black stripes on a white horse. Moral: You don’t need lavish budgets to engage the Listener’s imagination and passion--and with external marketing, even a simple but well-designed and executed campaign will be marvelously effective. Thoughts on What’s Up Around the Bend Electronic measurement will surely engorge an AC station’s cume. We’ll be able to boast perhaps double the audience of working women. But no matter how accurate the new mechanism, all the methodology will do is measure exposure to radio--not engagement with radio. Our audiences will be larger...but no more responsive (or valuable) to our advertisers. In this era of continually emerging technologies, music alone is a commodity--a need that can be satisfied at any one of a dozen destinations. The future for free, local radio is to offer unique, interactive, unduplicatible content that is ours and ours alone. If we are to engage our Listener...if we are to connect with our Listener--we must speak to her. We must speak with her. In gaining her trust, in arousing her passion, in appealing to her ‘tribal’ sense of community--we create a credible, durable brand; one which ultimately can be leveraged to deliver superior results for our Clients. At our core, we are in the content business. Our present delivery system is grounded in a self-limiting, single-stream ‘push’ model. We must retool our product as a website that happens to have a transmitter attached (rather than the inverse). Ultimately, the broadcast signal will act as a 24/7 billboard or promotional ‘sampler’ for the nearly limitless menu of on-demand, customizable, interactive and listener-generated content found online. A Postscript on Excellence Despite the massive change which has swept our industry, the days of legendary radio are not behind us. I was fortunate to experience at least the waning of WABC, WLS, KHJ and the other Top-40 giants. These are the stations that set the standards, the stations they write books about. These stations were the product of an unending, unrelenting, passionate quest for Excellence. And that’s why I run my race. I want them to write a book about my radio station, too.
‘The purpose of life is not to be happy. |
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