When I was a 14-year-old kid, radio seduced me. I wanted to be a radio star because radio was where all my friends spent their time. Being in radio was cool. Many of us entered the radio industry inspired by various on-air personalities. I was inspired in the early '70s by the likes of John Records Landecker, Charlie Van Dyke and Fred Winston at WLS, Larry Lujack at "Super CFL," and pretty much all of CKLW in Windsor/Detroit, all within the range of my hometown.
There were even some local radio heroes who inspired me, like Bob Dell at WOWO and Gary Lockwood, Chris O'Brien, Guy Hill, Jay Walker, and Bill Anthony, the "Live Guys" at WLYV, who were at every school dance and every event in town. I was attracted to the fun they were having on the air, their pranks, their relationship with the music, and the fact that they were stars.
Of course, these guys made it easy for me to break into the business by letting me watch them do their shows, sneaking me into the production room to practice being on the air, and letting me run the Sunday-morning church tapes to learn the board. I remember shaking when I did my first few live IDs. Before long I was doing weekends on the air with the help of these very giving local DJs.
When we wanted to
get on the air in the worst way, my friends and I created an illegal low-power
radio station with an old army transmitter (I hope the statute of limitations
has expired). Today, if we were really driven to be on the air, we would have a
potential audience of millions if we could get our stream online and find a way
to spread the word virally. There are hundreds of thousands of online radio
stations out there.
Future
Personalities
The Internet, of course, is where the personalities of the future go to become stars. But, unlike my generation of wannabe DJs, this new breed will be converging all media. We're already seeing it, among bloggers who write and produce podcasts and other forms of audio and video. Simple distribution methods allow anyone with talent to emerge on any number of platforms. I believe that hyperlocalism is the future because of the desire for local connectivity. It's already becoming huge.
I know what you're thinking. "We'll do that. It's what we do best in radio, so we'll just extend our brand." The problem is that this isn't about brand extension. If you do it, it needs to be about brand-shifting, where your brand shifts online and you're aware that the on-air brand will ultimately play the supporting role.
Nah, It Won't
Happen to Radio
I'm not one who hails the death of radio, but I do think that radio as an industry could place itself at risk if it's not willing to build new ships to sail on their own and not willing to -- eventually -- burn the old ships behind us. We can arrogantly say that what's happened to some newspapers (and more to come) won't happen to radio. That's what the newspaper people said.
Relying on Our
Past
I'm sure this all sounds very obtuse. I'm used to it. But there is an entire generation that thinks, acts, buys, listens, and responds differently than any generation before it. Your future and the future of the industry cannot rely on lifelong baby boomer listeners. It's time for bold moves, big investments (yeah, I'm a realist and I know no one can spend a dime), and the people who do that may become the hyperlocal media of the future.
Outsiders Are
Usually the Innovators
Oh, did I mention that everyone in the tech world believes that two of the big trends of the future are hyperlocalism and the "convergence personality," who is a writer, an on-camera talent, and an on-air talent (online), all rolled into one? The new communication vehicles will be created by someone; if radio wants to control them in local markets, they should jump on this fast. But, sadly, they won't. And it will take an outsider to do it and eat our lunch, much as Craigslist did to newspapers, which lost billions in classifieds revenue overnight.
Radio Ink
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In what
unanticipated ways will radio need to adjust and change in 2010?
A Note from Deborah Parenti, VP/GM of Radio Ink:
What will CBS Radio's Dan Mason say at Forecast that he believes you need to hear about change? What will you learn about 2010 and what you need to do as a radio operator, owner, investor? Join Eric Rhoads and the staff of Radio Ink for the premier financial conference in radio: Forecast 2010, held December 8, 2009 at the Harvard Club in New York. Limited to 200 people, and many seats are already sold. To register call 561-655-8778 or go to www.radioink.com/forecastsummit. Keynotes include: Former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee, who now hosts Citadel Media's "The Huckabee Report," and financial expert Ron Insana, host of Compass Media Networks' "The Market Score Board Report With Ron Insana."
I sent an e-mail with a more detailed reply to this, but I'll reiterate publicly that, from a student perspective, this is exactly what we're talking about with our student-run station. I'd also like to invite other readers to see our site at ACRN.com and let me know what you think about where we see radio going. Feel free to contact me at [email protected]. Thanks!
Posted by: Jason Robinaugh | October 07, 2009 at 09:48 PM