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But is “availability” of HD radios the problem?

Hdradioad

“They can’t find the radios even if they want one.”

That’s one way some folks explain HD radio’s sputtering sales.

But now that Best Buy is coming into the fold of retailers that offer HD radio products nationwide, it will be impossible to say that “availability” is a problem, because that availability will generally be universal.

Chalk off one excuse from the pile of excuses theoretically explaining HD’s lack of momentum.

Of course, the product choice will be thin – especially at the beginning. And – unique to HD radio deals – our industry gives away hundreds of millions of dollars of precious and valuable airtime to the retailer in return for stocking the item, which somehow makes the deal seem more like barter than an exciting new partnership motivated by the belief that HD radios will sell.

The proof, as they say, is in the pudding. And one broadcaster reported to me that he asked an iBiquity rep how many HD radios had actually been sold as of the most recent accounting.

And this was his answer:

150,000.

An aside: Check out that Best Buy ad above. That one page should tell you everything you need to know about who your radio station is actually competing against: satellite, mp3 players, cell phones, etc. This is exactly what I’ve been ranting about for the past two years. And it again raises the question I have asked many times: Is this the way to radio’s future or a distraction to the real opportunities and challenges before us?

Question to ponder: Which of the items on that page do you most feel an impulse to buy?

Bottom line: If we don’t acknowledge that there’s something wrong with our HD radio strategy, then how in the world are we supposed to fix it?

2 Comments;
  • http://www.friendlyvoice.com Steve Lawson

    Mark -
    I saw the JVC unit that Best Buy is selling. It’s pretty cool.
    Not only does it offer AM/FM and HD radio, it also offers a CD player and playback of MP3 files off of CD, It’s satellite radio compatible AND will control your iPod.
    HMMM. Will radio be promoting that terrific versatility?

  • http://www.Sunny95.com Chuck Knight

    Availability is part of the problem. I recently took a printed page of the JVC unit I wanted from the Circuit City website to the store. It wasn’t stocked nor could they special order it. I was told to go back home, order it online, bring the unit back in and then they’d install it. Good thing I had the fortitude to do it. Once installed, the head installer was impressed. Said it was the first he’d ever seen. Yikes, this was the head installer at Circuit City! I shuddered thinking of whether this is a long, long road our industry is capable of traveling.
    A second problem is the way we’re programming HD-2 channels. In order to “protect” our main formatic franchises, we’re wasting our HD-2 channels by similarly programming them to our HD-1 channels. We’re not innovating or expanding listener choice, just protectively programming the same stuff in a different order. How about a talk station targeting 18-23 year olds?
    Maybe all of this is being done by design because if the extra HD-2 channels would ever become hugely successful, each station would have a .5 share and what would that do to radio’s business model?

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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