followthemedia.com - a knowledge base for media professionals
The Numbers

Young People Shake It Off, Broadcasters Persist

Broadcasters have long counted on young people for energy, boundless curiosity and a weld to the future. Old people are set in their ways and, today, that means so very last century. Adapting to the "shake it off" set transfixed on smartphones is now elemental, surprisingly simple and a great comfort to those adept. Mass audiences are, some say, a thing of the past. Still those who count are still counting.

car seat kidYear-on-year overall listening in the UK dropped more than slightly in the fourth quarter 2014, reported radio measurement service RAJAR, down 1.1%. Particularly struck in these audience estimates were BBC national radio channels, off 3.5% to 45.3% audience share from 48.8% one year on. Even more, the BBC's share of 15 to 45 year olds dropped 6.9%. Commercial stations on aggregate also dropped among the 15 to 44 year olds in the national survey, down 3.1%. It is another not-so-subtle reminder that things do change. Or maybe it was the weather. The BBC, on the whole, leads commercial radio by only 8.5% audience share, narrowest in more than a decade. Commercial local and regional broadcasters made significant gains, 31.4% aggregate audience share, up from 28.8%.

BBC Radio 2 easily held top ranking nationally, 17.8% audience share up from 17.6%. News and talk channel Radio 4, number 2, dropped to 11.9% audience share from 12.5%. Radio 1 fell to 4th ranking, 6.6% audience share from 6.9%. The youth-oriented channel has been mandated to become more youth orientated, total audience therefore shrinking. Sports channel Five Live gasped for air at the quarterly finish-line, dropping to 3.5% audience share from 4.2%. They've had personnel changes.

The Heart commercial radio brand (Global Radio) continues to benefit from bigger coverage after absorbing the Real Radio brand last year. National audience share is 6.8%, up from 4.6% in Q4 2014 before the change. This puts Heart in third place. The Capital national network (Global Radio), long in restructuring, fell to 3.8% audience share from 4.2%. Brand consolidation and franchise enlargement also benefitted soft A/C Smooth Radio (Global Radio), which rose to 3.8% audience share from 2.3%. National channel Classic FM (Global Radio) was unchanged at 3.5% audience share, tied for 8th place nationally with BBC Five Live.

The Absolute Radio brand (Bauer) was yet another success for UK commercial radio, posting 2.7% audience share from 1.2% one year on and before, yes, a boost in coverage, much of it on digital platforms. The Absolute Radio brand is comprised of several era-specific music channels; Absolute '80's had the biggest boost. National all-sports commercial channel TalkSport (UTV) was unchanged at tenth place with 2.0% audience share. Belfast-based UTV Media indicated in January it might part with the dozen or so independent stations it owns in England and Wales, which would not include TalkSport or Irish holdings.

Persistence among all UK radio broadcasters continues to move forward, if not exactly propel listener engagement with digital platforms. BBC 6Music hit a certain reach milestone, exceeding 2 million listeners nationally. Survey methods being what they are, audience share actually dropped to 1.6% from 1.7% year on year. Most of the BBC's other radio channels barely or didn't move.

The analogue share of national listening continues to edge downward, perhaps related to the overall drop in listening. The DAB platform contributes most to digital listening, now 25.2% audience share against 37.9% for all digital sources, up from 23.4% and 36.1%, respectively. Listening via TV set-top box is less attractive, online a bit more.

Within the next year or so a second national commercial multiplex will almost certainly boost DAB listening. Whether that starts the clocking for analogue radio shut-off is another question. Bauer Media, UTV Media and tower and transmitter supplier Arqiva are pitching 15 channels to regulator OFCOM, including several existing radio brands plus a return for Virgin Radio. An independent consortium is proposing 18 mostly new channels.


See also in ftmKnowledge

Europe’s Radio – Northern Europe

Northern Europe’s radio has a very digital sound. And change is in the air. Economic challenges abound for both public and commercial broadcasters. The ftm Knowledge file reports on Denmark, Estonia, Finland, Iceland, Ireland, Latvia, Lithuania, Norway, Sweden and the UK. 144 pages PDF includes Resources (November 2012)

Order here

Digital Radio - Possibilities and Probabilities

Digital radio has many platforms. From broadcast platforms to internet radio and rapidly emerging smartphone platforms, listeners and broadcasters have choices galore and decisions to make. Some regulators have made up their minds, others not, some hedging their bets. This ftm Knowledge file details the possibilities for digital broadcasting and the probabilities for success. Includes Resources 149 pages PDF (August 2012)

Order here

ftm resources


related ftm articles

Digital Is Just One Platform... We Have Others
Broadcasters have found many surprises in the digital dividend. Some are nice, others not quite. Audiences migrate with ease from one platform to another, looking for something new and different or old favorites. One trend suggests platform carries significant weight in brand choice and, of course, they keep changing.

Audience Demanding More, Gets Less, Turns Off
Audience acquisition means everything to a broadcaster. There’s content to be created, talent to be managed, marketing to be devised, promotions to be organized, distribution to be acquired. Hitting all the posts is difficult, costly and absolutely essential. Then there’s the market leader effect. When top brands falter, the entire category feels pain.

Listening Rises As Boring Stations Lose
The audience chooses favorites. Sometimes new favorites get the nod, if they’re easy to find. Otherwise, people keep coming back to the best known brands though they hate being bored. You can’t outsmart them.


advertisement

ftm Knowledge

Media in Spain - Diverse and Challenged – new

Media in Spain is steeped in tradition. yet challenged by diversity. Publishers hold great influence, broadcasters competing. New media has been slow to rise and business models for all are under stress. Rich in language and culture, Spain's media is reaching into the future and finding more than expected. 123 pages, PDF. January 2018

Order here

The Campaign Is On - Elections and Media

Elections campaigns are big media events. Candidates and issues are presented, analyzed and criticized in broadcast and print. Media is now more of a participant in elections than ever. This ftm Knowledge file reports on news coverage, advertising, endorsements and their effect on democracy at work. 84 pages. PDF (September 2017)

Order here

Fake News, Hate Speech and Propaganda

The institutional threat of fake news, hate speech and propaganda is testing the mettle of those who toil in news media. Those three related evils are not new, by any means, but taken together have put the truth and those reporting it on the back foot. Words matter. This ftm Knowledge file explores that light. 48 pages, PDF (March 2017)

Order here

More ftm Knowledge files here

Become an ftm Individual or Corporate Member to order Knowledge Files at no charge. JOIN HERE!


copyright ©2004-2016 ftm partners, unless otherwise noted Contact UsSponsor ftm