Radio Ink: Convergence Conference Day Two Video Highlights
Labels: Conference, Convergence, Media, Radio Ink, Video
posted by Unknown @ Wednesday, February 11, 2009,
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Radio Ink: Convergence Conference Day One Video Highlights
Labels: 2009, Conference, Convergence, Radio Ink
posted by Unknown @ Tuesday, February 10, 2009,
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At The Talk Radio Seminar: Boomers, Context and Media Buying
Labels: Conference, Context, Insights, Radio, Talk Radio Seminar, TRS 2007Continuing Joint Communications' conference hopping, CEO John Parikhal attended Radio and Records' annual Talk Radio Seminar in Los Angeles.
His focus: Boomers, adapting media buying demos, and keeping on-air programming relevant through context and meaning.
Among the highlights, as reported by Radio and Records, context is talk radio's next growth cateogry:Some things just make sense, and some things need explaining. And that simple process of making sense of things could very well be the next creative and growth category for talk radio. At least, that's the speculation of Joint Communications' John Parikhal, who has a very good record of cutting through life's fog.
Appearing as one of seven talk radio industry participants and observers at the opening session of the 12th annual Talk Radio Seminar in Marina Del Rey, Calif., Parikhal said more people want analysis -- someone to tell them "what it all means" and to give a topic context in their lives. "They want you to 'make sense of things for me; give me a context.' And they want you to stop shouting people down." He added, "People say they don't like politics, but they mean that they don't like the extreme in politics."
Al Peterson, Radio And Records's news/talk/sports editor and co-moderator of the panel with publisher and president Erica Farber, asked if anyone was aware that NPR -- National Public Radio -- is "talk radio's dirty little secret."
ABC Radio Network's John McConnell quickly responded, "It's been the biggest success story in talk radio for the last number of years." That is partly, he added, because it does analysis so well and so often.
Parikhal added that a contributing factor to NPR's talk success is that "NPR is using sound better than anyone else. I call it the 'sound of the goat.'" He then described a mock NPR story of "a man walking up the side of a hill, and you hear the sound of a goat in the background." Said Parikhal, "They use in-depth, really good production. They are the National Geographic of radio. They paint with sound."
At another session, Parikhal talked about how radio is forgetting about an important (and still big) demographic -- Baby Boomers. Among the quotes:Advertisers and ad agencies are missing the boat on a great source of cash flow: the baby boomers. Particularly people 56 and older, who are left out of ad buys because they are perceived as being stuck in their buying habits. But that's a big mistake.
For more on the Talk Radio Seminar, click here.
"Fifty-six and older are lonely, waiting to die, and no one is providing entertainment for us," cracked Joint Communications' John Parikhal, drawing laughter from the audience.
When an audience member suggested that older listeners tend not to try new products but buy what they know, Parikhal quickly attempted to set the record straight.
"Older people are not set in their buying ways," he said. He pointed to boomers' love of buying computers, cars and gizmos, all the way down to getting different toothpastes for the newest whitening additive. He said the audience member's sentiment is "really unfair and biased and one that keeps radio stuck."
posted by Unknown @ Saturday, March 10, 2007,
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At The 2007 CMW Conference: 60 Ideas In 60 Minutes
Labels: 2007, Actionable Ideas, CMW, Conference, Programming, RadioJoint Communications is conference hopping this week, with John Parikhal at the R&R Talk Radio Seminar in Los Angeles and Chris Kennedy at the Canadian Music Week Conference in Toronto.
At the CMW, I served as a panelist for the "60 Actionable New Programming Ideas in 60 Minutes" discussion to help kick start the radio conference. Also participating: Mike McVay from McVay Media, Tracy Johnson from Jack FM/San Diego and Steve Young from Jones Radio Networks, with the session moderated by Chris Byrnes of Byrnes Media. Great ideas were shared by all. For those in attendance wishing a recap -- or for those unable to attend, here's my actionable ideas.
If you have any fresh ideas to add, just submit a comment at the end of this post.
A pdf of all 60 Ideas is also available by clicking here:
> WOM Marketing: Explore what Word-of-Mouth marketing means online for your audience. Attend various WOMMA-sponsored conferences and read their various white papers. Go to WOMMA.org for more. Learn how "spreading the word virally" works online so listeners will tell friends...who will tell friends...and so on...and so on...
> Online Suggestion Box: Do you have an easy-to-see, easy-to-use online Suggestion Box for immediate listener feedback?
> Do Search Engines See Your Site?: How do the Internet search engines perceive and filter your website? Go to SEOmoz.org as well as SEOkeywordanalysis.com.
> Listener-Uploaded Viral Videos: Offer a place on your website for listeners to upload/link favourite/recommend viral videos (make sure they get approved by the Program Director/Webmaster).
> iPod Companion Devices:The iPod turned 5 last November...and they're now everywhere. Give away Griffin iFM radio tuner add-on remote devices ($50) or Belkin TuneFMs for iPods ($55) or other iPod companion devices that include a radio tuner for the iPod. Make sure all your listeners have an FM tuner for the iPod. "Upgrade their iPod."
> Don't Make Me Think: Read and practically memorize Steve Krug's Don't Make Me Think, then make sure those rules are applied for the website's design and see what can be applied on-air as well.
> Broadcast Through Cellphones/PDAs: Deliver your broadcast through cellphone/PDA providers.
> Update Your "This Stunt Could Go Wrong" File: Prevent problems before they happen or before your listeners suffer water intoxication. In addition, consider conducting periodic "risk exercises" with staff to practice possible "what ifs".
> Pretend You Are Launching A Station: If you are an established station, pretend you are launching as a brand new station on a brand new signal. Since you have no baggage or heritage, how would you launch to get maximum community response? What would be your essentials? How would you attack competitors? Then ask yourself, are you doing those things now? If so, are you doing them the best you can? What can you improve? If not, what can you do to make those things happen? And what can you do different than now?
> Have Essentials On Your Website -- Simplify: Reduce clutter. Be font size appropriate for your target audience (older -- larger fonts). Make what you do on-air simple and easy to access/view/read on your website -- especially your current and recently-played songs on-air. Include lists of Top Requests (include sample listeners). Edit! Provide top newsworthy stories and/or water cooler buzz of the day...not a lot of stories, just enough.
> Positive Radio Campaigns: Independent of RMB/CAB or RAB/NAB initiatives, incorporate positive radio campaigns locally. Radio is the original wireless. Be wireless...and visible. Stay active in the community and on the streets. Avoid being overly digital-centric; focus on being digital-balanced with the real world needs of listeners. Promote radio in general over and above your own station.
> Offer Custom Ringtones: Produce and make downloadable custom ringtones using the station voice, character bits from the morning show, jingles and/or production...or custom messages from personalities and key format artists and bands.
> Are You Blogging?: Gives the station personalities a forum to be connected with the community and for listeners to comment and interact. Content can be anything from show bit discussions to appropriate content matching station style to community events, live-blogging during personality-oriented shows, etc.
> Do A "Best Of" Local Survey: Newspapers and free weeklies have long done the local "Best haircut", "Best local pint", "Best pizza", etc. contests...rarely has radio made it their own in a market. Conduct your own contest. Partner or take it away from the papers, incorporate the voting online and text message/SMS as well as voice mail voting.
> Do Research Beyond Just Radio: When conducting custom market research (perceptuals, music test, focus groups, etc.), make sure you periodically measure multi-media experiences, habits, preference usage and demands/needs beyond just radio to avoid a myopic viewpoint and to better optimize listener's typical multi-tasking routines for media and entertainment. Find out where radio is in your target audience's usage spectrum...so threats and opportunities can be revealed.
For the full presentation pdf, click here.
posted by Unknown @ Friday, March 09, 2007,
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