radio & audio

ARF Leadership Lab: What’s Old is New Again — Transforming TV, Radio & Print

Our current 7-week summer session focuses on cross-platform. Last week, three “professors” led a wide ranging conversation centered on the ongoing changes in three media. ARF President & CEO Gayle Fugitt served as moderator, joined by David Poltrack (CRO, CBS), Radha Subramanyam (President Insights, iHeartMedia) and Britta Cleveland (SVP, Meredith).

Watching the 80-minute video below is ideal but below are some of their illuminating comments, by topics, without attribution.

Media and Media Content

  • The nature of content has not really changed, instead how you access it has.
  • Media should be everywhere the consumer wants, when she wants.
  • We are using new media talent (e.g. from You Tube) as discovery, i.e. from Internet to TV.
  • Every medium serves a purpose and magazines should be doing what magazines should do – not what TV or smartphones are doing
  • We have to be platform agnostic. You cannot control the consumer. All you can do is understand them and service them and it will all work out.
  • As long as you have reach and engagement all grounded in context and content, you will do well.
  • How the Business Has Changed
  • We used to have three weeks to prepare an answer. Now they want answers in real time, sometimes before the meeting itself even ends.
  • We spent so much time trying to find the data sources. Now we have the ability to crunch through large datasets and derive meaning. It is interesting and empowering. But we have barely cracked the surface.

Skill Sets

  • Curiosity – rather than just looking at the numbers.
  • Flexibility and Confidence. After all, it is very hard to predict the future.
  • A passion for the business.
  • Being tenacious.
  • Listening for intent (e.g., during focus groups, one on one conversations).
  • Toughest part of the business is objectivity.
  • There’s always hype – but it is researchers responsibility to provide the facts.
  • Immersion and observation to uncover underlying motivations.

What’s Coming Within the Next Year

  • More use of Virtual Reality.
  • Dollars swinging back to “traditional” media.
  • Growth in Smart TV’s: many have access but have not used it. Offers big potential for data.

Advertising

  • The consumer does not want a world free of advertising. They want less advertising and better advertising and relevant advertising.
  • Mobile advertising solutions remain elusive.
  • Less reliance on advertising and more directly from consumer subscriptions (e.g., CBS All-Access, Netflix).
  • While watching TV, when commercials came on, people traditionally turned to diversions. Because with today’s 2nd stream devices, tweeting and IM’ing (for example) have become the new form of diversion. Surprisingly, when ads come up, we have seen higher recall for using those devices (i.e. paying more attention to the screen). Even DVR fast-forwarding is declining.

Watch Video

A New Audio Measurement Solution – via BusinessWire and a STATISTA INFOGRAPHIC

Industry leaders iHeartMedia, Cumulus, Entercom, Cox and Sun Broadcast Group announced today a strategic alliance with Shazam for a new US audio audience measurement solution that will deliver market- and station-level audience metrics across all radio formats.

Their approach is to maximize the companies’ proprietary data assets and measure both broadcast and digital audio.

Access full article from Business Wire

Also, a Statista infographic on streaming and music sales.

Nielsen’s Mid-Year Music Report reveals that the number of audio-only music streams in the United States nearly doubled in the first half of 2016 compared to the previous year. As expected, this rise comes at the expense of other market segments. CD album and digital album sales declined by 12 and 18 percent, respectively, while digital track sales plummeted by 24 percent. Vinyl is rising in popularity but is still a small segment.

Infographic: The Rise of Music Streaming Continues | Statista

“90% of Car Commuters Are Listening to The Radio” and “Native Advertising Definitions Continue to Confuse”

From Center for Media Research – “90% of Car Commuters Are Listening to The Radio

According to Edison Research’s newly-released Share of Ear study, commuters spend an average of 87 minutes each day listening to audio in their cars.

About 9 in 10 commuters listen to traditional AM/FM radio while in their car on the way to work There are a variety of other options used — CDs (62%), commuters own digital music files (54%) and streaming internet radio (42%). 

Another statistic – ninety percent of all households have at least once car, and 85% of all workers commute by car.

See more » http://www.mediapost.com/publications/article/274139/90-of-car-commuters-are-listening-to-the-radio.html

 

From Media Post – “Native Advertising Definitions Continue to Confuse”

The author turns to an industry leader to offer a series of definitions to a subject that seems to mean different things to different publishers, e.g. native advertising, branded content, brand journalism and sponsored content.

See more »  http://www.mediapost.com/publications/article/274286/native-advertising-definitions-continue-to-confuse.html

 

 

 

Campaigns Turn to a Cheaper Medium to Get Voters’ Ears: Radio

Candidates for the Presidential primary campaigns, as well as PACs, have increased their use of radio ads, according to this article by Nick Corasaniti in The New York Times. This article discusses the strengths of radio advertising for a political campaign.

Among the appeal of radio commercials for political advertising, according to this article:

-Radio listeners are a captive audience while they are driving.

-Radio ads avoid the clutter of television.

-Compared to television advertising, radio advertising is less expensive.

-Production costs for radio are also lower than TV production costs.

-Conservative talk radio hosts have large and devoted followings.

-Radio provides a means to target local voters.

-It serves as a closing tool to remind voters to go to the polls and reminds them of the issues.

Corasaniti also discusses how radio companies are helping politicians reach voters and target listeners according to party affiliation, likelihood to vote and other criteria.  The radio stations also seek to win new business.  One of the largest radio conglomerates in the country, iHeartRadio, has seen a 30% rise in the fourth quarter in political advertising, when compared to the same period in 2011.

Details of the radio campaigns for both Republican and Democratic candidates are analyzed in this article.

See all 5 Cups articles.