Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Has A DJ Ever Made You Angry?

My last blog got under some peoples skin.

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Here is a link http://voices.mysanantonio.com/dominiquegarcia/2009/09/kanye-west-lady-gaga-concert-c.html

So I wanted to clarify things. That was NOT my intention. I have always been known to have radical opinionated views and not a lot of people can handle or accept them. But that is irrelevant. Some people were trying to put my head on a pole.

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Just because I do not like Kanye, does that make me a bad person? If you said yes I feel sorry for you.

So making some people upset with my blog got me thinking. It reminded me of a time when I was apart of a situation where I helped make a LOT of people angry.

Rewind to December of 2006


I was one part of the KXXM Mix 96.1 night show hosted by Mo Bounce and interned by Bobby "Bandcamp" Baiza in San Antonio, Texas.

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To make a long story short we made a huge deal that on Friday of that week we were going to make a huge announcement. We even promoted it for a couple of weeks telling people to tune in at a certain time. That Friday we said that our huge announcement was that Santa was not real. Being how we said this between 8pm and 9pm on a Friday night 3 days before Christmas did not sit well with a lot of people whose children had head the announcement.

We had people call into the radio station cussing us out. Some people even contacted the station management etc. After it was all said and done I asked myself...

"What if my kids heard on air that Santa wasn't real?"

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I acknowledged I would have been angry as well.

Which brings me to the point of this blog, "Has a DJ ever made you angry?"

This seems to be a very touchy subject with a certain select few. I've once heard one DJ give a shout out to a guy who's woman he stole from him. Not very cool. Needless to say when that guy heard one day that DJ was at so in so remote location broadcasting, the guy went to pay the DJ a visit. You can only imaging the confrontation that had happened. And yes someone did go to jail for assault.

There have even been reports of radio DJs being murdered for angering people.

Okay killing a radio DJ who has made you angry is definitely taking it over the line. But what would you do if a radio DJ made you angry? Would you do nothing? Would you never listen again? Would you contact the station management? Or are you that type pf person who would wait in the parking lot waiting for that DJ to come on out? (By the way if you do that you are going to jail so don't do it)

DOMINIQUE'S OPINION


If someone on air makes you angry the best thing you could do is not to listen again. That and or contacting management. But at the same time people need to understand that the DJs are looking for content to talk about each day. It is obvious that content is not always going to agree with everyone.

Also think of it like this, the DJ is trying to do one thing. ENTERTAIN! That in turn gets ratings. Very good ratings pretty much almost ensure that DJ will still have a job. If he or she makes you mad and enough people do not listen...

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they go away.

Also, stop taking what you hear on air so serious. If you do not agree with the views and opinions of what is being said that is perfectly okay. So unless what is said is racist or equally stupid, is it really worth time out of your day to get angry? I can certainly understand if something racist or sexist is said but if its just a DJ saying Kanye West is a dirt bag (dirt bag is the PG version) or if so in so is pernicious (also a PG version of the word I wanted to use) who cares?

I guess what I am trying to say is that the opinion of the person on the air should not alter your day. If someone makes you angry.... TURN THE RADIO OFF.

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For the most part most DJs are well aware of what will make people angry and most respect and do not cross that line. However there are always those bad apples who do not respect that and say what they will regardless if it makes people angry.

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Community Relations & the Radio Station

In this world of focusing on generating income from advertising, voice-tracking, and cutting of staffs, I'm always afraid that radio will lose sight of it's involvement in the community. Specifically in being there for all of the non-profits that are also feeling the pinch of the economy. I have always been a big believer in the fact that radio needs to be a part of as many non-profit campaigns as humanly possible. Part of this comes from having worked in the non-profit world as a fundraiser for the Muscular Dystrophy Association, but also from my sense of wanting to do the right thing.

Now I understand that fielding all if the calls for help can be a daunting task. the way I always liked to handle it, and take it for what you will, was that if was working with the big charities such as the American Cancer Society, Muscular Dystrophy Association, The National MS Society, The Red Cross... you see where I'm going with this... is take on those causes. No questions asked. Whatever they need, we were there for. PSA's, participating in events, helping to recruit teams, interviews... you name it.

Unfortunately, for the smaller groups like the church holding a book sale... we had to cut back. We would run PSA's and put them in the community section of the web site. If time and staff allowed, we would send a street team and a van.

I'm not saying to ignore the smaller groups, but you have to allot for time and resources.

Here's a personal example of what being involved in the community has included. I'm a cancer survivor. At my last radio job, I wondered why we weren't involved in any of the local "Relay For Life" events in our area. I called the Director of Communications for our region and arranged a meeting with her. She told me that they had been working with our competitor for years, and the Cancer Society wasn't particularly happy with them. But the volunteer committees that actually ran the events kept insisting. I asked her what they did and she replied that they would run some PSAs and show up with a van for a little while. I laid out my plan for her which included not only the PSAs, but they would be on all three of my radio stations, interviews on 2 of them, assistance in recruiting teams, web site inclusion (a whole page dedicated to Relay), showing up for the events, having our jocks do the kick-off and in one case singing the National Anthem, help in recruiting entertainment, and so on. When the person I was speaking with asked me how much this was all going to cost.. well, I was caught off-guard. My response was "What do you mean cost???" Apparently, our competitor charged non-profits. this is a HUGE no-no in my book. When I told her nothing, I thought she was nearly going to faint.

As it turned out, this was a huge win for my radio stations. Not only did we do something for the good of the community, but it was a win-win for everybody. It gave the American Cancer Society some much needed publicity and gave the stations that "warm-fuzzy" with the community.

We not only under-promised and over-delivered, but we were awarded the ACS' award for Best Media. One of the accomplishments I'm most proud of in my career.

If you're radio station has a minimal involvement in the programs like this, consider taking a more active role. It will only reflect well.

Monday, September 14, 2009

Stealing Advertising Secrets From The Big Boys

FOUR POINTS THAT WILL CHANGE YOUR LIFE

This is an abbreviated version of something I sent out this morning in my weekly Hot Points newsletter. I liked the concept so much, I wanted to share it with all the Radio Twit Heads (or whatever it is we’re calling ourselves these days). If you work with people who create radio commercials, and you find yourself often frustrated with the results, lay this on them.

I've recently stumbled upon an arcane bit of philosophy from ad agency giant BBDO.

It's an operating philosophy that will leave you reeling in its simplicity.

It helps create advertising that blows prospects away, makes them rush to the phone, flock to the customer's store, and possibly even change the course of mighty rivers.

It's known as The Four-Point Process.

Here now, this earth-shatteringly simple way to profitable advertising.

Ready?

(1) Know your prime prospect

(2) Know your prime prospect's problem

(3) Know your product

(4) Break the boredom barrier

Hmm, you say. Feeling a little let down? Were you expecting more? A genie from a bottle, perhaps?

Perhaps the genie is before you and you simply don't recognize him.

Let's dissect this for a moment, shall we?


KNOW YOUR PRIME PROSPECT

Too often, people try to put the horsing around before the cart. They attempt Step 4 without ever considering 1, 2 or 3. And foremost is knowing who's buying your stuff. Who is the advertiser's main customer? Age, sex, social position, attitude, perspective, concerns, hopes, joys--everything that makes this typical customer who they are.

The Trader Joe's core customer is described as an unemployed college professor who drives an old Volvo. That one simple description says volumes. You can break that one line open to find all kinds of modifiers about who that man is and what he likes.


KNOW YOUR PRIME PROSPECT'S PROBLEM

It’s said that, "Good advertising is problem solving." Every prospect (as defined in step one) has a problem the advertiser can solve. The ad is a promise to solve that problem.

But how many times do you see or hear an advertisement that doesn't address the problem?

Instead, it addresses some very clever comedy scenario, sidestepping the real problem?

When I get in the car, I often turn on the biggest station in town--which means the advertisers are paying top dollar for the air time--and I'm hearing commercials that make no sense. They act like they're solving a problem--but it's often a problem that shouldn't even be on my mind. Like, "Our fully background checked employees won't steal drugs from your medicine cabinet and aren't on the sex offender's registry."

Dead serious. That's a line from a commercial for a local air conditioning contractor.

My problem as a prospect for air conditioning is not that I've got ex cons traipsing through my house and stealing my Zoloft. My problem is I can't afford to upgrade my AC system in this lousy economy and it's costing me money. Or any of a dozen other potential problems.


KNOW YOUR PRODUCT

This point that is often avoided entirely.

Our San Diego Lasik client could do what so many Lasik doctors do--stand on the street corner of radio with a sign, yelling, "Laser vision correction for just $500 per eye!" Instead, she offers intensely personal service unlike any other Lasik provider, and specializes in helping individuals for whom perfect vision is mission critical, like pilots and military officers. We figured this out by spending an entire day talking to the doctor and her patients--and none of this became clear until several hours into the process.

Until we got to know The Product (the doctor and her service), all we had was just another Lasik surgeon. But now, we have something truly special because we took the time to get way down in there. (If you haven't heard these commercials, feel free to visit www.waittilyousee.com )


BREAK THE BOREDOM BARRIER

This is so often the first step people want to take. But 99 times out of 100, the hard work of 1, 2 and 3 must be done first.

THEN we get to be creative--and relevant. Relevance is key. There can't be 15 seconds of creative comedy about the prospect's messy yard, then 45 seconds of unfocused bullet-point announcer blather about landscaping and construction.

This isn't an exercise in filling up 60 seconds with words. It's an exercise in finding one essential truth that excites the prospect to take action.

I frequently point to Motel 6 as an example purely because it works so well.

The essential truth about Motel 6 is it's the single best cheap motel in America. We all know that. We all know Tom Bodett. And if there's one thing that Tom's monologues prove, it's this: their agency (The Richards Group) knows the Motel 6 customer, knows the customer's problem, knows the product, and they've been breaking the boredom barrier with every single commercial for that last 20-plus years.

Put the Four-Point Process in your hookah and smoke it, inhaling deeply.

Bomb Threat, Now What?

So I was talking to a friend of mine earlier when we were talking about messed up things that has happened in our radio career. All of a sudden I remembered a memory that came back to me that I had forgotten about for a little while now.

Okay I won't say what station I was at nor will I name drop my former program director, but looking back at this situation it is pretty messed up. This happened early in my career one late night when I was on the air and I got a strange call from the listener line. Granted I was still a rookie DJ but even I knew how serious this was. I pick up the phone and I hear a mans voice on the other end. He then tells me three words. "There's a bomb" His voice was very low and sounded very serious. Almost instantly it made me think of every exit/entrance door in the building and if the doors could be penetrated.

I admit my initial reaction was this....

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And all I could think of was....

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So instead of going into full on panic mode I responded with the first word that came to mind. "Where?" He then said another three words. "In the building"

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He then hung up the phone and probably went to sleep for all I know all while I stood there beside myself for a moment to think about what had just happened. In another radio station in the same building we had a manilla folder with the words "BOMB THREAT" on it. It was basically instructions on what to do if a bomb threat occurred. Keep in mind this is around three o'clock in the morning when this all happened and I made the decision to skip the instructions and just call my boss for how I was to handle the situation.

Here was a guy who would sleep with a tiny radio under his pillow and next to his cell at all times. The one time I really needed him he doesn't answer the phone. I didn't care and blew up his phone until he finally answered. Finally I told him what had happened not knowing if my life could end at any moment. I am sure he could clearly hear the concern in my voice not knowing if it was real or not. I didn't want to take any chances.

His response came as a surprise. "Well, do you think he was serious?"

WHAT THE HELL???

I told him I had no idea if he was serious or not. I also told him if the station was going to be blown up, I preferred to not be inside it. He then tells me that the man was probably screwing with me and not to worry about it. What he said next was something that simply amazed me. He says "I'm going back to bed, call me if something happens"

I was shocked....

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I could not believe how nonchalant he was about it. Plus how he made me out to be as if I was overreacting. Needless to say I don't think I over reacted. If our sister station had a folder with instructions on what to do during a bomb threat, then that alone says that the situation needed to be taken serious. I obviously did not die that night and yes the man was in fact screwing with me. But at that time I was upset because I wanted him to had done something, ANYTHING! And yet, he did not.

Now so many years later in all honesty, it makes me kind of angry to think about it. To think that my life was taken into such a small regard is flat out insulting.

Thursday, September 10, 2009

Harness the Power of a Five-second Commercial

(repost from June 24, 2009)

I sold my first five-second radio commercials back in 1975. (For the record, that's thirty years before Clear Channel would proclaim "Less Is More" and with great fanfare begin offering five-second "adlets" or two-second "blinks." Twitter founder Jack Dorsey had not yet been born. Heck, Al Gore hadn't even invented the Internet, though he may have been toying with the idea. But I digress.)

I started selling five-second ads because a legendary radio sales trainer taught me how effective they could be. He wasn't alone. The Radio Advertising Bureau also reported that some stations were having success with what they called "eight-word ads."

There are at least three advantages to shorter ads:

1) They force the ad writer to craft a clear, concise message. There's no room for "fat" in a five-second ad.

2) It's much easier for a listener to comprehend, retain, and recall a short message in its entirety. It's in-and-done before the listener can even react to it! (Stick around and I'll share with you a powerful technique for demonstrating this effectively to a prospect.)

3) Because five-second ads cost less than :30's or :60's, the advertiser's budget buys him greater frequency (more repetition of his message).

Short ads can be deployed to trip the recall switch, reminding the listener of something he's heard about in greater detail in a longer commercial. Think of this technique as "clutter busting" - referring not so much to the other ads on your station as to all of the messages that bombard us daily everywhere we turn, from computer monitors and cell phones to the chatter of our co-workers, from in-store POP to ads on public benches, buses, billboards, and buildings, television, newspaper, magazines. While there may be disagreement as to how many advertising messages we see or hear in each day, we can agree that there's plenty of competition for a listener's attention. We live in an age when distractions are plentiful.

So, let's say you've sold your client a schedule of :30's or :60's to get the word out about his big store-wide sale. His commercials include a number of price-and-item illustrations, maybe a special financing offer, prize drawings, and so forth. Let's imagine that he's running ten commercials a day for ten days, and these ads are scheduled to run between 6:00 a.m. and 7:00 p.m. Assuming even distribution, he's running one ad every 78 minutes.

By adding just ten five-second ads per day to his schedule, you've doubled his frequency, cutting the time between exposures in half. Add another ten and now your listeners are being reminded about his sale every 26 minutes. The marginal cost of the additional five-second ads has tripled his frequency!

All other factors being equal, this advertiser is going to enjoy better results from his buy on your station, which ought to bring him back for more.

Sometimes longer ads aren't even necessary. It's quite possible to build an entire campaign around five-second ads exclusively. I have a client who for many years has sponsored the weather update following network news at the top of the hour. His five-second message - usually a positioning statement, but occasionally a call-to-action - runs once an hour, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. For all intents and purposes, his advertising message reaches the station's entire audience.

Every listener, every day.

Think about that. How many of your advertisers can claim with reasonable certainty to reach every single listener on your station during the course of a day or a week, let alone all year long? It's terrific exposure, and much easier for an advertiser to achieve and afford with a five-second ad.

The proliferation of satellite-delivered syndicated programming has all but eliminated the flexibility most stations once enjoyed when it came to scheduling commercials. If your station does all its own programming, consider yourself fortunate, indeed. You still have the freedom, or at least the potential, to schedule ads of any length, in any combination, at any time. The world is your oyster. Go for it. Stations whose programming comes via a bird in the sky have little choice but to fill fixed-length breaks with fixed-length ads at fixed times, with few opportunities for deviation from the :30/:60 standard. It might be worth sitting down with your Program Director and asking him to identify any possibilities for running short ads (such as the :05 weather sponsorship mentioned earlier).

If you are able to identify and secure the appropriate inventory, and you're ready to put it to work for an advertiser, here's a technique you can use to demonstrate to your prospective client the power of a five-second ad:

First, write the copy. Create the actual message that you're going to propose the client run for this campaign. Take the time to make it a good one. (I recall this Jim Williams classic: "Don't Make a $500 Mistake. Bob's Used Cars.")

When you're sitting across from the prospect, tell him, "I'd like you to help me with a little experiment." Pause. Make sure you have his undivided attention. Then, read the five-second copy aloud, with appropriate feeling.

Read it a second time.

Read it a third time.

Then, ask him to repeat what you just read.

In most cases, he'll repeat it verbatim without hesitation.

"You've just demonstrated the power of a five-second ad. I read it to you only three times and already you have it memorized, the whole thing."

Rehearse the advantages of the five-second ad with him:
1) forces lean, concise copy;
2) more easily understood, retained, and recalled by the listener (as he just demonstrated)
3) allows more frequency within a given budget

Then, present your proposal. Make the sale. And enjoy the results.



More than three decades ago, I used to drive the 55 miles between Winona and Rochester, Minnesota, two or three times a week. One Sunday I tuned in to Chicago's WGN (720 AM) and kept it there to hear what was happening in my old hometown. I don't remember the name of the host (though as I recall he had the most wonderfully soothing rich bass voice), but to this day I do remember two ads that he read live, several times each, during the course of my commute:

"Seven-Up, the Uncola. Chicagoland's Number One Refresher."

"Chapped Lips Need Blistex. Buy Blistex."


I swear, I never intended to memorize them. It just happened.

Like magic.

Will There Ever Again Be Joy In Mudville?

Disheartening, for sure. Unfortunately, not surprising. From AdWeek, September 10, 2009:

“Many of the country's largest national broadcasters are on the verge of bankruptcy, and the Radio Advertising Bureau announced that Q1 2009 was the industry's worst-ever quarter in terms of ad spending.”

Something sad and pathetic has indeed happened to radio at large. (Though certainly something high and mighty is happening at Radio Twit.)

I was recently sitting at a conference table with the great air personality Bobby Ocean, who posited, “The problem with radio is it’s no longer run by broadcasters.” I would agree, and take it a step further.

Radio is no longer run by broadcasters, and if advertising is the lifeblood of radio, the commercials are no longer created by anyone who Gets It or gives a damn.

For years, I’ve watched helplessly as radio professionals create little globs of self-pleasuring audio, thinking they were creating sales messages. I’ve listened to everything from local spots to national campaigns and wondered, Who on earth let this crap have life?

For sure, there are radio people and agency pros who understand how to create great radio advertising.

But too often, radio advertising is a victim of wholesale ignorance. The writing is weak and sloppy. The production is uninformed and self conscious. And at every level, from local to national, all is presided over by people gleefully leading advertisers down the merry path to Hell.

How did this happen? And how can it be corrected? Is it even correctable?

I only know that it pains me to have to write this. And I have no answers. But if this industry doesn’t undergo some serious self-examination and implement some extraordinary self-correction, our favorite broadcast medium (and arguably the most powerful advertising venue in history) is going to become a vast wasteland that pales by comparison to anything Newton Minnow could dream up.

Of course, I mean all this with love.

Intro from Dan Walker Smith

Hello, just a quick intro from me: I'm Dan, I'm a journalist from London. I started out in radio, like so many before me, with a show on college radio in Edinburgh, before moving down to London to be a broadcast journalist.

I had various freelance jobs in broadcasting before moving into print journalism, though I kept a couple of shows going on community and college stations. A year or so ago I won the Alistair Cooke Award for Journalism, which led to a Fulbright Scholarship studying at Stanford. This gave me the chance to get my teeth back into proper broadcasting - I had a couple of shows on KZSU and I wrote my MA thesis on how podcasting is affecting traditional radio. I love radio, I'm fascinated by podcasting, and I'm keen to see the audio format thrive.

So what you'll get from me is a British perspective on what's happening over here. It'll all be quite light-hearted, and chances are it'll be general commentary, rather than an inside scoop. If you've got any questions you want me to consider, just drop me a comment, and I'll see what I can do. Cheers, DWS.

Oh, and this is what I look like:

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

The Radio Promotions Director - An (abbreviated) Job Description

I've spent the better part of my career in radio promotions. I've worked in small markets (Danbury, CT), large markets (Hartford, CT), and major markets (Boston, MA). The one question that seems to be a constant throughout my career has been, "What exactly do you do?"

That's actually not an easy question to answer. The thing that most people expect is that I'm the guy that just goes out and hangs banners and balloons. And yes, while that is a very small part of the job, there is so much more.

I guess the best way to start this discussion is that the Promotions Director is the person in the radio station that directly interacts with every single other department. From programming to sales, production, traffic, business, engineering, even reception. I also like to describe it as the person that the receptionist sends all the phone calls to when he/she has no idea where they are supposed to go.

Even though the jocks are the "faces" of the station, the promotion director is generally the mouth. When the jocks don't want to answer an awkward question, it usually comes to the Promotions Director.

The Promotions Director generally works very closely with the General Manager and the Program Director to plot the marketing course for the station. Everything from how to brand the station, logo design, web presence, and so forth. You also have to work closely with the sales department to develop promotional programs for station clients. This is actually tricky because you have to make these programs fit in with the aforementioned branding and presence of the radio station. Here's a simplistic example... You are a classic rock station, but your client wants you to give away tickets to, say, Britney Spears. How do you do this? Well, you don't. This annoys not only the client, but the sales rep who already promised the client that we would do it. NOTE TO SALES... Please do NOT promise anything to a client until it has either passed through promotions or programming.

Most of the time, though, I've enjoyed putting together sales promotions. We usually have really cool prizes to give away, make much needed revenue for the station, and can look larger than life. While I was the Promotion Director in Danbury, I worked closely with a local travel agency who got us lots of trips to give away... cruises, Rio, a private concert with Jimmy Buffet in Anguilla. Plus we've given away backyard makeovers including new patios, grills, hot tubs, landscaping. Cars are always fun prizes to give away.

Sales promotions could also be very turn-key programs. The client places a buy and wants to give away tickets to their event. Simple enough. Divide the tickets up throughout the day. Usually with an emphasis on AM Drive and PM Drive. Have the jock take caller 9, include the :10 second tag and you're done.

The problem with sales promotions is that in a lot of cases, the sales rep is focused on getting the sale and will promise the client things that are impossible to pull off, or are, quite frankly, not worth putting together based on the amount of the buy. Not true in all cases... I've certainly had my fair share of salespeople who "got it". Who would sit down with me and discuss possibilities and what would work best for not only the client, but also the station. But it seems that at every station I've worked at, there was the one sales rep that made my life a living nightmare. Ironically, the one from my last station is someone I still keep in touch with and she will still come to me for ideas. Which I like. It helps keep my unemployed brain active.

Events: This is where a promotion director can really shine. I would say that about 80% of the events are pretty turn-key. Usually remote broadcasts where the station will show up at the client with the van, a tent, some prizes, and a jock who will do a series of 1:00 minute live spots imploring you to "Come down to XXXX Honda for Midnight Madness. The best deals of the year are here now!" But there are other events... festivals, consumer shows, seminars. I've loved working on each and every one of them.

Public Relations: Somebody has to get the word out to people outside of your listenership. My job consisted of writing press releases, being the station spokesperson, being interviewed, etc.

Community Relations: This warrants an entirely different blog post which will hopefully be coming soon.

Staff management: Weirdly enough, when I worked in a major market, I had an assistant. That's it. And he split time between my station and the other AM station in the cluster. In the tiny market of Danbury, I had a full-time assistant, 8 per-diem part-timers, and at any given time 5 to 25 interns. Go figure. My job was to hire, in some cases fire, train, schedule (though I usually delegated that to the assistant), and try to keep everybody happy.

Vendor relations: I was responsible for seeking out and growing relationships with all kinds of vendors. People who made our t-shirts and premium items for giveaways, graphic designers, auto body shops (station vans get dinged), etc... Most of the time with little or no budget to work with. Advertising trade was my savior!

There is so much more to this job that I can ever put into one post. I'll add more in the future. In the meantime, I'd love to hear what you have to say. Please feel free to leave a comment.

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

Dan Watts Introduction

Welcome to the week after Labor Day...home stretch for the Holidays.

My name is Dan Watts and I have been in the Radio Industry (mostly) for more than 20 years. I have been on both sides of the hallway as we like to say.

Started out on the air at the campus radio station for Anderson University as well as a commercial station in town. The commercial station was Oldies and the first night I was on the air and allowed to play music I played a cut by Boston that was not on the playlist. Not surprisingly the PD was on the phone to me within :60...whoops.

I transferred to Eastern Kentucky University for my last 2 years of college. I worked on the air at the campus station there too and a commercial station in town.

After college, it was out into the "Real World" and doing mornings in the metropolis of Leitchfield, KY. I was LIVING making $15k per year and living in a tiny apartment. I couldn't believe it that I was actually making a living being on the radio...it was a dream come true. My career idol as a kid was Johnny Fever from WKRP.

Then I met this girl... (this is the point where most stories take a really big turn) and long story short I ended up in Washington Courthouse, OH doing weekend air work and learning sales during the day. That was 18 years ago and radio advertising has been my life ever since!

Radio Advertising has been a very rewarding career for me....not only financially but in many other ways as well. I have moved around the country (Columbus, OH...Wheeling, WV...Scranton, PA...back to Columbus...and now in Cincinnati.) I have had periods where we have made lots of money and periods where it was all rice and beans. I have worked with some wonderful Radio people like Tim Stinson, Dave Robbins, TJ Holland and Donna Gamblin....and some certifiable idiots who shall remain nameless. To have gotten to go to a lot of great concerts for FREE and have eaten at a lot of fantastic restaurants on expense accounts.

At this point in my life, I have gotten to the point in my career where it is more about what I can do for others and less about what I can do for me.

About two years ago, I started working with a radio station called WAKW FM in Cincinnati, OH. We are a Contemporary Christian Music radio station. I was asked to created a Business Development Department (essentially selling advertising on the station) from scratch. When I started here, they we doing a just a little bit of underwriting billing. We recently finished our 2nd full fiscal year and we finished at over $1 million in revenue. Our goals for this fiscal year are to exceed $ 1.5 million and we are on pace to do so.

So that's a little bit about me...my blogs on here will be from the advertising view of things with a focal point on Christian Radio.

I was thrilled to be asked by Charlie to be a part of this blogging team and hope that I can make meaningful additions to the blog. If you see something on here that you like (or don't like) please feel free to post a comment...would appreciate your feed back.

Blessings,

Dan Watts

Monday, September 7, 2009

DJs With Big Egos

Before I begin this blog I am going to start out with quotes I have heard egomaniac DJs say over the years. Enjoy.

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"He's just mad his girl wants to go home with me instead of him"

"What? We have to wait in line and pay cover charge?"

**On Air** "Yes have no fear, I have arrived"

"This entire station would crumble if it weren't for me"

**On Air** "To all the people calling to haggle me, I don't go to your job at McDonalds to haggle you"

"It was obvious he didn't know who I was and who he was dealing with"

"People would much rather hear me crack jokes than listen to music"

"You must have forgotten that I am the talent and you carry and setup my equipment"


Wow, just wow. I assure you each of the above quotes are real. I consider this to be the flaw of the industry. DJs from all over seem to think they are someone special just because they are on the radio. Granted only a handful of people in any given city get to do what we do and yes it is a cool job. But that does not give anyone the right to think that they are better than the average Joe. I have seen certain DJs who will remain nameless think that once they walk into a room that everyone should basically drop what they are doing to acknowledge them. Please allow me to attempt to put the DJs who seem to think this way in their place.

**Ahem**
I am not trying to be a traitor to the people in my industry. But if you think you are better than other people and have a big head, you are no one important. You talk on the radio. You do not contribute a huge chunk to society except give the people that do something to listen to.

Now I might get some backlash for this blog but this is an issue that really bothers me. But then again those who might feel the need to backlash me might be the insecure ones who assume I am directing this at them. In fact this is their ego inflating all over again. I am directing this at no one. This is a broad generalization at any DJ that tends to act this way.

Saturday, September 5, 2009

Radio DJs On The Death Star

Okay I am prepared for the backlash of being called a Star Wars nerd. I am one. I am not one who would go as far as dressing the part but still, a Star Wars nerd.

Before I go any further with this blog I would like to provide you all with the inspiration that made this come together.

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Okay, now THAT is nice. Megan Fox is a beautiful woman but that picture right there makes her a goddess.

Where was I? Oh yes. So I decided I would attempt to enter the Star Wars world and imagine what it would have been like to be a radio DJ on the Death Star.

It is obvious they would have had to import radio DJs in from elsewhere because there is no way the average Storm Trooper could pull off a single show. They have horrible aim when they shoot their laser guns. Hell, they could barely even walk.



Talk about a crappy gig. Not only do you have to move to some remote space station in the middle of nowhere, but the majority of your listeners are mindless clones. Now most djs know that no radio job last forever. If they did in fact fire someone, what did they do with them?

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Then there is always the fear of saying something wrong, you get choked to death by an invisible hand? The pay would have to be spectacular in order for me to take that job.

Then there is the infamous Rebel Alliance. Imagine you are sitting in your studio minding your own business when a group of left wing militants attack. What do you do? Do you break in the music with a special announcement? Do you continue to play the music as nothing is happening?

I mean seriously? Who has time to listen when most people are scrambling to kill the enemy at hand? Then on top of all that there is a major battle where space fighters are shooting each other and crashing onto the surface of the Death Star. What happens if they knock out the tower that allows you to stay on the air? Do you hop in a ty-fighter and try your luck at shooting people down?

Then just as you are gathering your thoughts the rebel alliance shoots a laser into a exhaust shaft no bigger than 2 meters wide and...

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Most of the station is destroyed. And with destruction like that it is almost impossible that a new radio station will be within the rebuilding budget. Man... djs on the Death Star must have had it rough.

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Hi... My Name Is Eric. And I'm a Radio-Holic.

Hi there! My name is Eric Seigel and like many of my radio brethren, I'm currently unemployed. OK, not completely. I serve people coffee at Starbucks. But I'm otherwise unemployed. I have a long history in radio...

Here's a quick resume... I started in 1992 as an intern and Assistant Promotions Director at WKCI (KC 101) in New Haven, CT. Did some on-air there as well. I spent the summer of 1995 at WQGN (Q105) in Groton, CT on-air. From 1995 to 2000 I worked at WTIC AM&FM in Hartford in several positions including on-air, Promotions Director, and National Sales Promotion Director. Somewhere in this time frame I also worked on the client side as an Account Director for a radio promotions agency called TMPG. In 2000, I got a call out of the blue inviting me to interview for the Promotions Director job at WRKO-AM in Boston. I took the job and stayed a little less than a year. After a stint of unemployment, I got out of radio and became a fundraiser for the Muscular Dystrophy Association. Although, I wasn't out of radio completely. I started doing weekend airshifts at the radio station that I grew up listening to. WRKI (I-95) in Danbury, CT. When the Marketing Director left, they offered me the job. Which I promptly turned down. 5 times. Realizing how much I missed the business, I eventually took the job overseeing marketing and promotions for both I-95 and WDBY (Y-105). 3 years after that, apparently it was time to "make a change". 2 years after that... well, I can make a mean 1/2 caf grande non-fat sugar-free vanilla extra carmel carmel macchiato.

I'm looking forward to blogging about my experiences. A lot of my posts will be about radio through the eyes of a promotions person. I hope that you find them interesting and leave comments. I have a personal blog (which sorely needs to be updated) where you can see my resume (you know... if you're hiring) called Blogged Down.

Welcome to Radio-Twit. We're glad that you're here. Please don't forget to tip your waitresses.

Dominique's Introduction



Hello, my name is Dominique Garcia.

I first entered the world of radio on May 30th, 2000 and fell in love with it from the moment I first walked through the door. I like to dub myself as someone who has held everything from the most insignificant job in radio all the way to a full time on air slot.

My entire career has been spent in Texas. I have worked for such stations such as 550am KTSA, the legendary 102.7 KTFM, XHTO 104.3 Hit FM, KNDA 102.9 Da Bomb, and KXXM Mix 96.1

I would go more into depth on what my career has entailed but it can all be told in a short cliffnote that goes like this...

Got job as a AM talk board op. Wanted to be a jock on CHR sister station. Joined the street team and busted my tail and eventually landed as a board op on that CHR station. Hiring freeze and people were fired and I begged my boss to give me a shot and he did. After a while on air I eventually got offered a position as a night jock in El Paso. After a year in El Paso I returned to San Antonio. I was out of work for a few months then landed a morning show in Corpus Christi, TX. When that was over I was out of work for over a year. During that year I begged one local program director every single week to hire me. After 11 months of harassment, he finally did hire me. Been there ever since.

I am also a blogger for the local newspapers website and I blog about radio related events, music, or local artist or venues. I would like to acknowledge that I am still young. I think my blogs will be slightly different than the others here on this blog since I work in the CHR format. I humbly admit I do not know everything there is about radio, but am pleased to be sharing my knowledge and insight with you.

Friday, September 4, 2009

Let's Get Started

I want to thank you for visiting the newest radio industry blog, the Radio Twit Bloggers Blog. I'm Charlie Profit, I own CAB Radio, a broadcast services company (read the blog here). Some of you already know me; for those of you who don't, I have been in the industry for the better part of 20 years and have worked for independents and large groups alike, in small, medium and large markets. Probably the highlight of my career was managing a small AM station for almost 7 years in Connecticut. I learned a lot about the business of the radio business. I hope to bring some of those experiences to this blog.

The Radio Twit Guide was born out of ideas I had on how radio could use Twitter to connect with listeners. That idea evolved into a news feed providing updates in the industry from many different resources. I hope you have enjoyed following our Twitter account and Radio Industry RSS News Feed Blog at www.radio-twit.com. If you haven't experienced either of them, click over and check them out. In the coming months, I'll do my best to offer more tips on ways to use Twitter at your radio station.

I hope you'll continue to follow the Radio Twit as we continue to provide you with unique insights, experiences and applications you can use in your radio career and beyond.

Welcome

This is the new Radio Twit Bloggers Blog. Radio Twit Bloggers are everyday radio folk with a variety of opinions! There are presently six bloggers and each will be introducing themselves in the coming days. Radio Twit Bloggers is an all volunteer effort. However we have committed to post consistently in order to make this one of your regular stops every week. Look for approximately two posts per week. Some weeks there may be more or less. This blog will primarily contain the opinions or experience of the person writing the blog. We do not plan to be blogging regular news, however on occasion we may toss in some information on breaking news as we hear of it from our Radio Twit Radio Industry RSS News Feed found at www.radio-twit.com. We welcome your comments to any of our posts and look forward to building up this unique community of radio folk interested in diverse opinions and the sharing of experiences in the radio industry! We look forward to serving you.

Respectfully,

Radio Twit Bloggers