How is your song performance on radio? And which tools can help you to gain that knowledge?
Perceptional research is failing
As a Danish company carrying the slogan “cold hard facts” we received some very uplifting news last week in the aftermath of the Danish parliamentary election. One of the largest Danish newspapers have decided to scrap political polls as a way of gauging the opinions in the population.
That is very good news indeed because we have been been travelling the world with a presentation containing an image of Donald Trump and a large Union Jack flag for years now. Admittedly, this is not the most creative way of communicating our point. But an efficient one and understandable all over the world:
Perceptual measurement is failing. And not in the “fake news” kinda way, so please don’t try to say the words in the voice of Mr. Trump himself. With only two outcomes (Trump/Clinton or Remain/Leave) the polls still got it wrong – and wrong with a large margin.
We firmly believe the methodology behind the classic perceptual research is outdated. It comes from an age when there was less fragmentation, less division, fewer choices and clear differences between genders and age groups.
Trends are changing
In todays world you can be eco-friendly but have tough opinions on immigration. You can be 24 and have the perspective, opinions and taste of an older person. You can like pop music but still hate the voice of Justin Bieber with all of your heart.
Furthermore, there seems to be a trend – maybe it is the “like culture” introduced by social media. People will not always admit to their true taste or opinion but rather try and radiate a particular image. And by that keeping the beliefs and preferences inside.
Thing is, when building a hit radio station, it is great to get people to say they like you via branding. But if they really don’t; they might just like the idea of liking you or the image it reflects to say they like you. This results in shorter listening sessions and no loyalty.
Back to the Danish election where polls were off by as much as 10% and couldn’t predict huge wins for the parties who ended up celebrating. Therefore, Jyllands Posten finally ended their spending on political polls. Now they will need to rethink the way they measure opinion. Hopefully they will hit the head of the nail next time instead of not even being in the same ballpark.
Song performance measurement on radio
You need to do that too if you still rely on methodology essentially built on “do you like this song” and “how well do you know this song”. It doesn’t work anymore and if you want to see the future of measurement. Additionally, we have got some nice stuff for you.
Start by checking out this video that show you how we do music testing. We observe listeners instead of asking them what they like. Built to create sharper music profiles and higher Time Spent Listening numbers. It is also available when you need it. Not three weeks after you started playing a song. It is better to know the song performance on radio in time.
Just one note: since the demo video was produced we have also included familiarity numbers in the tests. This allows you you to use mindframe you have always used: score vs. familiarity.
Send me a line if you are ready to also dump the perceptual way of thinking and to start acting on the behavior of your listeners instead.
CEO & CO-FOUNDER OF RADIOANALYZER
Alumni of DJH (Danish School of Journalism) and eternally devoted to improve mass communication. Has excelled as Journalist, Columnist, Commentator, DJ, News Director, Sports Editor, Sub Chief Editor, Innovation Director and Radio Manager. Started in radio at age 14 and isn’t planning to quit anytime soon.