BLOG

AC, where’s your “Mom Squad”?

MomsquadMost AC’s will tell you how important it is that they capture the loyalty of women, especially during long periods of listening during the day. But capturing loyalty is much more complicated than playing a batch of good songs, one after another, without stopping and without talk.

Women enjoy and are enriched by participating in a community of their peers. This, for example, is why “Mom’s clubs” are more than orchestrated play-dates for children. It’s why Oprah’s TV show, magazine, and website are meeting places as much as they are destinations.

Radio has a long way to go to maximize this.

In San Diego, an Oprah competitor, TV’s 10-4 San Diego, has launched a combination promotion and community called the “10-4 Mom Squad.” As the website describes the program:

It’s an exciting new community for San Diego mothers from all walks of life. When you sign up for the 10-4 Mom Squad, you’re helping create a unique support network for other mothers like you.

The incentive to join: The chance for a spa-pampering and more.

See this video of the “first members of the Mom Squad.” And note the message boards for moms of kids of all ages.

If your audience is female and adult, more often than not they’re moms. But what do you do to reach out in a proprietary, branded way to these women? Are you simply piggy-backing on community events or reading mom-oriented liners? Or is your approach much deeper, like the “Mom Squad”?

The ridiculous (in my view) sessions our industry hosts on “What Women Want” are both patronizing and shallow. The fact is that women know what women want and we men generally do not.

You can start by taking a page from Channel 10 and enabling interactions of your audience, integrating the content on-air, and developing emotional connections and non-music reasons to listen – “a support network for mothers like you.”

Then bask in the glow of the resulting goodwill.

If you want the loyalty of women you’re going to have to earn it.

1 Comment;
  • Peter Childs

    “Enabling interactions of your audience, integrating the content on-air, and developing emotional connections and non-music reasons to listen” is exactly where radio should be going – not just for women but for the entire audience.
    An audience is a network of social networks and discussing on air the things that motivate and interest those social networks provides recognition and validation for every member of that network – at a very personal level.
    Women may be the first ‘segment’ but one quickly learns that they are not homogenous. The more that the station can tap into the viral connections that motivate them (or any audience member) and the connections they make with each other the better. And the best way to do that is by hosting the connection points and reinforcing the community on-air.
    Whether forums are the right mechanism – which I don’t believe – because of the way the dilute individual voice without building community consensus – is not important.
    What is important is that if radio is local and personal connecting with the audience needs to be directed at a level that’s meaningful to members of that audience – and that’s as group of connected individuals sharing similar interests.

Sign Up For Blog Email Updates

About

MRM President Mark Ramsey has worked with innumerable television and radio broadcasters over his career, including all the biggest names, from Clear Channel, CBS, Bonneville, Sirius XM...

Mark Ramsey