A New Direction for Broadcast

rogers-pastoreLast week I told you about how our world is exploding with media to the point of over-saturation. Not only are we drowning in a plethora of media, the rate of new ways to communicate keeps accelerating at an unfathomable pace.

For one form of broadcast, RADIO, I believe it has a super power that it can wield to cut through the clutter.

Radio’s Advantage

Radio’s biggest strength is its ability to make people aware of things. More than 300 radio stations across America annually participate in “Radio Cares” to support St. Jude Children’s hospital, raising tens of millions of dollars every year.

Radio has the power to make people aware of the need, and listeners respond with their dollars.

Artificial Intelligence

Radio grew up with the strength of connecting with the radio listener by power of the human voice and a talented personality behind a microphone.

Radio is an art form. When you remove the artists, there’s not much left.

The development in the field of AI (artificial intelligence) is incredible. Amazon’s Alexa now has a “news voice” to deliver the latest goings-on in our world with the authority of a network newscaster.

But, the curious thing is, as artificial intelligence grows, we find human interaction takes on even more importance.

Radio needs to automate the backroom and other areas unseen or unheard by the listening consumer, and return to live personalities 24/7 that connect and engage the listener on an emotional level. Personalities that can not only sell the music, but the advertiser’s goods that support the radio broadcasting station.

The Radio Listening Experience

The 21st Century world is filled with people seeking out the best customer experience. And what comes through the listener’s speaker, is critical.

Radio programmers sweat bullets over their OTA signal while completely ignoring the programming that streams over the internet. The radio listener’s experience in those long commercial stop-sets is painful. Often with the same advertisement running multiple times in one of those gargantuan breaks.

This IS NOT a great listening experience.

Radio Needs to Be Personalized

Radio needs to stop worrying about reaching the most people and instead personalize its programming to a specific target audience. A specific group of people with like interests, needs and desires.

Radio that personalizes itself to an audience that shares common beliefs and/or lifestyles will deliver an advertising platform for products and services that wish to reach these same people.

Social Intelligence

Radio needs to learn how to turn its social media data into social media intelligence that can be leveraged to personalize their programming and keep it fully aligned with the target audience.

80% of people’s decisions are based on emotion.

Emotion is data too.

Fred Rogers

Back in 1968, public television in America was worried that Senator John Pastore’s Subcommittee on Communications was going to gut its congressional monies. Public television’s head selected Fred Rogers to champion its cause before Senator Pastore’s committee. Mr. Rogers testimony is still considered one of the most powerful pieces of emotional persuasion ever filmed.

Fred Rogers appeared before Senator Pastore on May 1, 1969 and it will definitely be worth your time to view and analyze it HERE

Rogers secured public television’s full funding without a single penny being cut.

During Mr. Rogers presentation, Senator Pastore remarked: “Well, I’m supposed to be a pretty tough guy, and this is the first time I’ve had goose bumps for the last two days.”

When Fred Rogers concluded his testimony, Senator Pastore’s closing statement was “Looks like you just earned the twenty million dollars.”

Radio’s Mission for the Future

Radio can’t win by being artificial.

Radio needs to be earnest, authentic and live in the moment.

Radio needs personalities that are personal, informal, and that speak to human feelings and emotions using the words that the listener uses and understands.

The radio personality who becomes an extended member of the listener’s family can be powerful in making the listener aware of everything they need to know, even advertised merchandise and service.

Radio’s best investment to secure its future is creating the best listener experience both over-the-air and online.

14 Comments

Filed under Education, Mentor, Radio, Sales

14 responses to “A New Direction for Broadcast

  1. jmelnick@coloradio.com

    GM Dick:

         Request that you do a couple of hours with Rollye James on her Friday evening show.   Would make for great insight and education…   And Rollye is just a great person  …

                         Make this happen….    Cheers    Jay,   ColoRadio

    Liked by 1 person

  2. John

    Wiping tears from my eyes after listening to Roger’s testimony. Thanks for that?

    Liked by 2 people

  3. Prof. Taylor. Excellent! Thank you.

    Liked by 1 person

  4. Dick…I couldn’t agree with your assessment more. (and I never tire of watching Mr. Rogers appearance before that sub-committee!) But all of this, in my opinion, is contingent on ‘the people problem’ in our chosen vocation. Our industry needs to, again, re-focus its energy on re-establishing the value of hiring and having broadcasters who can offer experience and at the same time learn new skills going forward. There is just too little hiring, too few opportunities, and, quite frankly, a growing age-discrimination aura that has become even more pronounced. I champion our industry still. But its future depends on even more involvement from human interaction, and that requires ‘budget’ to hire those people. But it’s a shared challenge. While I get exhausted at seeing ‘radio personality’ on those lists of ’10 occupations that are dead and/or dying’, it’s up to us to learn new skills, modify old ones, and take some risks, programming- and production-wise, so that we put ourselves ‘above the robots’ and re-assert our industry as a continued viable player.

    Liked by 1 person

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  6. Darwin

    “Radio can’t win by being artificial.
    Radio needs to be earnest, authentic and live in the moment.
    Radio needs personalities that are personal, informal, and that speak to human feelings and emotions using the words that the listener uses and understands.”

    I think you nailed it here – these are major problems radio needs to face, and face them honestly. Admitting you have a problem is the first step to take if you want to survive and thrive. I marvel at the way AM radio is discarded, especially considering just how wide an area can be covered with one signal. It’s one part content, one part investment in LIVE talent, and one part marketing on the right platforms to bring people to yours – AM or FM. The magic of radio is that there is someone on the other end of the receiver – a magic that is fading fast, and getting to the point where listening to radio isn’t much different from SXM, or streaming services.

    Liked by 1 person

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  8. Grateful for shariing this

    Liked by 1 person

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