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Showing posts with label Facebook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Facebook. Show all posts
Friday, 1 May 2020
Radio Survives and Thrives in a Pandemic
One of the earliest forms of mass entertainment was the invention of the cinema which is traced back to the late 1800's with the advances of Edison and the Lumiere brothers. Cinema has evolved over the decades in cinemas and studios, through the decades. The list includes, the silent era, the use of sound, cinemascope, 3D, animation, the different genres from slapslick to sci-fi and the evolutionary advances in CGI has changed how we consume the movies. Each development being heralded as a 'game changer'. Each new theme is an attempt to keep the audience captive, evolving as the audience evolves and matures. Each development becomes an attempt to suspend our belief in reality or to create a new reality. The cinema, like other mediums. lures us in and then through mystery, comedy, horror or action alters our perception of the world. Cinema has changed with the times, reflected the times we live in and changed how we consume the medium with the arrival of talkies, the blockbuster or propaganda films.
Cinema's cousin is television and from the time of Baird in the 1920's, television too has changed in both delivery and consumption. The early television was mechanical, then electrical became the norm and the medium evolved from 405 lines to 625 lines to HD, black and white became colour, sets originally were bulky are now flat screen and slimline, cable television, satellite TV and digital. What we consume has expanded, as has delivery systems from single channel, to multi channel, video recorders, on demand, subscription TV and online.
The internet in the past two decades has developed at a tremendous speed and its entertainment provision has expanded, sometimes unchecked. From YouTube to Tik Tok, from online gaming to social media and from porn to online movies and sports, the internet continues to evolve and to entertain. The method of consumption has also changed exponentially. Originally a hard drive and a monitor were the delivery system, today it is on lap tops, tablets and mobile phones.
One entertainment that has changed the least is the delivery of audio entertainment via the radio. The radio had been with us since the 1920's and while the method of delivery whether it is via AM/FM/SW/LW, digital or online apps the content has changed little, speech and music with no special effects or gimmicks ( not withstanding the brief relationship with AM stereo). The wireless box in the corner of the living room has morphed into a portable transistor radio, the car radio, through your mobile phone and online, often changing the definition of radio.
The radio station, like the movie studio or the television channel may have different outlooks and editorial bias, they may be state run, independent and commercial, local and community, pirate or institutional outlets but their content changes little. That editorial direction, like a movie or TV show are often tailored for their particular audience but at the end of the broadcast it is speech delivery or music. If you tune up and down the radio bands or listen to online audio content including podcasts, speech and/or music is what you will here and unlike a cinema where having paid in and you don't like the film and rarely walk out, on radio you can easily change what you listen to.
With reflection on current events (the Covid19 pandemic 2020), the cinemas are closed and fake news confuses the consumer online and in social media, yet radio has found a new lease of life as it continues to deliver speech in the form of information and news and allows quiet reflection with music of every genre. Radio has surprised and surpassed expectations in these troubled times and we as a race of people should be thankful for the fact that radio is there, the constant companion whether you are in the kitchen, the bedroom, the car or exercising and we should show our appreciation to those who have stayed on the air whether it is from the quieter studios or home studios, they have been essential.
Monday, 4 December 2017
How Many Facebook/Twitter Followers Does Your Station Have? Have You Been Conned?
Social media such as Whatsapp, Facebook and Twitter are at the heart of Irish radio station media presence as they keep listeners involved. Their online presence is another advertising revenue stream and can influence advertisers as they decide where to locate their cash. On Sunday December 3rd 2017, as the stations in a very competitive broadcasting landscape ramp up their Christmas advertising packages, we took a look at some of the Irish radio stations online presence and found some surprising results. These results do not include every radio station in Ireland just a representative selection and they are listed here in order of their Facebook Likes
Spin topped the twitter top ten but that's not the full story. Spin 1038 was the second most listened to station after FM 104 in the Q1 JNLR figures with a 13% share (FM 104 had 16%) and they have 88,000 more twitter followers than the national state broadcaster's music channel 2FM. This should be music to an advertisers ear but when you drill into the 'followers' just like RTE Radio earlier this year when it was discovered that the 'followers' were padded with non existent followers (https://twitter.com/rtesecretpro/status/926051160972255232)then there is a fraud been perpetrated on advertisers and legitimate followers. These are screen shots of some of their phantom followers
Station | ||||
98 FM | Dublin | 695,923 | 145,000 | |
iRadio | Munster | 580,816 | 102,000 | |
Beat FM | Munster | 555,680 | 70,600 | |
FM 104 | Dublin | 496,558 | 123,000 | |
Today FM | National | 439,501 | 235,000 | |
Spin 1038 | Dublin | 414,541 | 329,000 | |
4FM | National | 401,900 | 13,100 | |
RTE 2FM | National | 393,461 | 241,000 | |
Spin South West | Munster | 262,941 | 81,800 | |
Q 102 | Dublin | 172,237 | 15,300 | |
Galway Bay FM | Galway | 135,279 | 11600 | |
Newstalk | National | 121,794 | 203,000 | |
Cork 96FM | Cork | 111,853 | 34,900 | |
Christmas FM | Temporary | 102,063 | 89,700 | |
Radio Nova | Dublin | 101,291 | 11,200 | |
Sunshine Radio | Dublin | 98,015 | 2,645 | |
WLR | Waterford | 70,629 | 16100 | |
RTE Radio One | National | 42,257 | 110,000 | |
Midlands 103 | Midlands | 37,282 | 3,839 | |
MidWest Radio | Mayo | 31,719 | 11,400 | |
Northern Sound | Ulster | 27,838 | 6,506 | |
LMFM | Louth | 24,846 | 17600 | |
KFM | Kildare | 23,322 | 10,700 | |
Raidio Na Gaeltachta | National | 22,114 | 17,800 | |
Ocean FM | Sligo | 20,561 | 6,920 | |
Phever | Pirate | 12,473 | 1,634 | |
Radio Maria | Online | 11,764 | 14,100 | |
8Radio | Temporary | 9,620 | 6585 | |
Klub FM | Pirate | 9,420 | 624 | |
Spirit | National | 9,408 | 2,097 | |
Tonik | Pirate | 8,362 | 353 | |
RTE Gold | Digital | 6,885 | 1,921 | |
Radio Na Life | Dublin | 6,818 | 7,727 | |
Dublin City FM | Dublin | 6,111 | 8,454 | |
Near FM | Community | 4,894 | 4,024 | |
Radio Snowflake | Online | 3,018 | 571 | |
Dublin Digital Radio | Digital | 2,694 | 1308 | |
Cork Community Radio | Community | 2,573 | 19 |
98FM have over 695,000 likes for their page that equates to 58% of Dublin's population. To put that into perspective according to recent JNLR figures (Q1 2017) 820,000 people in Dublin listen to the radio every day. According to those figures 110,000 listen to 98FM on a daily basis that is just 1/6th of their facebook followers. The top ten stations were
Cork based pirate radio station Klub FM have more followers than Spirit Radio which broadcasts across the country and more followers than RTE digital station RTE Gold that has been receiving extra press coverage recently.
Twitter is another measurement stations can use to entice advertisers to their station. The more twitter followers your station has the more popular they are, right? Well NO.
The top ten Twitter accounts from the above list were
Spin 1038 | Dublin | 329,000 |
RTE 2FM | National | 241,000 |
Today FM | National | 235,000 |
Newstalk | National | 203,000 |
98 FM | Dublin | 145,000 |
FM 104 | Dublin | 123,000 |
RTE Radio One | National | 110,000 |
iRadio | Munster | 102,000 |
Christmas FM | Temporary | 89,700 |
Spin South West | Munster | 81,800 |
Spin topped the twitter top ten but that's not the full story. Spin 1038 was the second most listened to station after FM 104 in the Q1 JNLR figures with a 13% share (FM 104 had 16%) and they have 88,000 more twitter followers than the national state broadcaster's music channel 2FM. This should be music to an advertisers ear but when you drill into the 'followers' just like RTE Radio earlier this year when it was discovered that the 'followers' were padded with non existent followers (https://twitter.com/rtesecretpro/status/926051160972255232)then there is a fraud been perpetrated on advertisers and legitimate followers. These are screen shots of some of their phantom followers
Surely it should be the responsibility of the Broadcasting Authority of Ireland to ensure that their licensed stations are not conning the public and businesses.
Labels:
98FM,
BAI,
Communications,
Dublin radio,
Facebook,
Irish,
JNLR,
RTE,
Spin 1038,
TV3,
Twitter
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