Tag Archives: Why?

What is Radio in 2026?

Two years ago, I asked the question, “Has Radio Lost Its Why?” I asked, because 100 years ago radio’s WHY was to be a technology that could provide nationwide communications that would be a unifier for cultural and social systems.

Since the start of the new year, as I’ve sat in on webinars, one technological development has dominated all of them; Artificial Intelligence aka AI.

Radio’s Revenue Source

Radio is an advertising supported medium and in 2026, the radio companies that are growing the most, attribute that growth to their digital initiatives.

Those initiatives include standalone web news sites, that don’t even mention radio, let alone radio stations owned by the same company. These products work best in communities that have been left with a  “news desert” created by say the death of their local newspaper.

Just about every business has found its original business model challenged by a population connected to the internet; an internet now enhanced by artificial intelligence.

What Does A.I. Say Radio is Today?

I put that very question to artificial intelligence and it responded with:

AI Overview

In 2026, radio is a hybrid, digital-first medium, blending traditional intimate human-hosted broadcasting with AI-driven efficiencies and multi-platform distribution. It acts as a trusted, community-focused and increasingly interactive audio experience, merging terrestrial, streaming and podcasting formats while leveraging AI to enhance, not replace, the human connection. 

Key Aspects of Radio in 2026:

  • Digital Integration & AI: The industry is focusing heavily on integrating digital sales and AI-based recommendations to boost advertiser ROI, notes Radio Ink. AI is used to optimize content creation and understand listener habits.
  • Human Connection in the Age of AI: Despite the rise of AI-driven tools the human voice remains the most valuable asset for connecting with local audiences.
  • Format Trends: “Yacht Rock” has, emerged as a popular format in early 2026, alongside more traditional local programming. RadioInsight.
  • Technological Shift: The, growth of, DAB+ is enhancing sound quality and variety offering better reach for local and online stations, say RadioKing.
  • Key Future Focus: According to the National Federation of Community Broadcasters 2026 is about adapting to new models where community stations prioritize direct engagement over federal funding.
  • Role and Relevance: Radio is seen as one of the last free accessible sources of news and information, as shown on PBS.    

According to Radio Content Pro 2026 signals a pivot towards a more diversified revenue stream.

Where is The Best Place For a Small Business to Advertise?

I asked A.I. to advise me about where a small business should advertise, and it said:

Recommended “Small Business Mix” (2026)

If you have a limited budget, experts recommend a 70/20/10 split

  1. 70% in proven intent-based channels (e.g., Google Search).
  2. 20% in optimization/retargeting (e.g., Meta Ads to stay top-of-mind).
  3. 10% in experimental high-growth channels (e.g., TikTok Shop or in-game advertising).

Color me skeptical, but asking an internet based computer brain, where the best place to advertise, is like asking a barber where the best place is to get a haircut.

But as Fred Jacobs pointed out in a blog article he wrote this week, in 2026 “it is a challenge to find radios for sale at mass merchandise stores like Walmart, Costco, Target, or Best Buy.”

Radio’s Big Problem

The real issue for radio broadcasters is that the internet is a better innovation for addressing those original foundational tenets of radio’s purpose than radio itself; to “operate in the public interest, convenience and/or necessity.” “You can often feel a competitor coming long before you lose your dominance in your format category,” says Jacobs.

So, in 2026, What is Radio’s WHY?

Simon Sinek published a great book in 2009 called “Start With Why.” Sinek argued that the most influential leaders and organizations communicate from the inside out, starting with their purpose (the “Why”) before the “How” and “What”.

Sadly, all I’m hearing from radio industry leaders are a lot of “How’s” and “What’s” without the foundational question of “Why.”

People don’t buy what you do, they buy why you do it.

-Simon Sinek

Radio consultant Tommy Kramer frames the answer to your radio station’s WHY question this way:

  • What does your radio station do that I can’t get everywhere else?
  • What does your radio station do that I can get ANYWHERE else?

My wife Sue and I got really engaged in the Venerable Monks “Walk For Peace” from Fort Worth, Texas to Washington, DC; a 2,300 mile walk. Venerable Monk Bhikkhu Pannakara was riveting each time he spoke. He said something that I think applies to this question of knowing Radio’s WHY in 2026 when it comes to sales and marketing your radio station.

He said that in order to give something to another person, you must first own it yourself. For example, you can’t give a bottle of water to another person if you don’t first have a bottle of water to give. Likewise, you can’t give love to another person if at first you don’t love yourself.

Radio can’t tell an advertiser WHY radio is a good place to spend their ad dollars, if they don’t first know their radio station’s WHY to begin with.

Why do you do, what you do?

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What’s Radio’s Why?

WHYSimon Sinek says people don’t buy what you do, they buy why you do it. Watching the live streams of the 2018 Radio Show sessions and reading all of the reporting on the meetings in Orlando this past week, left me asking the simple question: “What’s radio’s why?”

College Kids on Radio

The RAIN Conference in Orlando put four college kids from the University of Central Florida on stage and asked them about their radio listening habits.

Spoiler Alert: They don’t have any radio listening habits.

These four students said things like “radio is obsolete,” “there’s no need for radio,” and “it’s very rare that I listen to radio.”

To these kids, radio doesn’t have any “why.”

What does?

YouTube, Apple Music, Spotify…in other words things that stream what they want, when they want it.

Write The Wrongs About Radio

George Johns and Bob Christy are getting together to write a blog aimed at fixing radio, by writing about the things they hear radio is doing wrong.

“(Radio) has to evolve to be relevant in today’s world,” they write. “There has been almost no evolution in radio (and) what George and (Bob) want to do is challenge radio to evolve and become relevant again.”

They write the  3 basics of great radio are: 1) be professional, 2) be interesting and 3) be entertaining.

The 25-54 Demo

Fred Jacobs wrote about the fabled radio demo of 25-54, also known as, the “family reunion demo.” It never really existed, except as a way for an agency buyer to get the C.P.P. (Cost Per Point) down for a radio station they really wanted to place their client on.

You would have thought as the number of radio signals increased, that the variety of programming choices would have too, but the reverse happened. Radio offered less choice of programming and music formats. As Fred writes, “broadcast radio surrendered its Soft AC, Smooth Jazz and Oldies stations to SiriusXM and streaming pure-plays.”

Millennials are not kids. I know, both of my sons are part of the millennial generation. They are both well-entrenched in successful careers and raising families.

The college kids referenced earlier are part of Generation Z. And those kids don’t know (or care) what radio even is. They don’t even know what life was like before smartphones. And smartphones have really replaced just about every other device Millennials and Boomers grew up with.

Norway Turns OFF Analog Radio

Norway is a country of about 5.5 million people. Norway turned off their FM signals almost a year ago and went all digital using DAB+. So what’s happened to radio listening in Norway?

Jon Branaes writes, “Norwegians still choose radio when they think it’s worth choosing. Radio has not lost our biggest fans but the more casual listeners.”

Norway has also seen FM listening replaced by internet delivered radio, which grew significantly after turning off analog FM signals. They expect smart speakers to contribute to even more of that type of listening in the future.

The Takeaways

Radio first needs to know its “WHY.” Then it needs to communicate it, clearly and simply or suffer the consequences.  Bud Walters of Cromwell loves to say, “If you don’t know where you’re going, any road will take you there.” Until the radio industry figures this out, getting new people to listen (or former listeners to return) will be a challenge.

“FM is not the future. DAB+ (digital broadcasting) can keep radio relevant in a digital future of endless choices.” But Jon Branaes adds, “Radio must respond with its core strengths – being live and alive, useful and present in listener’s lives.”

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