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How Pandora can become the New “Radio”

From Inside Radio: 

Pandora is pushing its way into the car. The pure play webcaster that allows users to create and customize their own radio
stations has its eye on the auto market and home appliance integrations. Pandora VP of business development Jessica Steel
tells eMarketer that many of its 30 million registered users stream the service in their car via mobile apps. “We’re definitely
looking at ways to make that experience more seamless — basically making all the core user interactions of Pandora integrated
into the vehicle, so that you don’t have to fumble around with your iPhone to skip or rate a song.” Pandora has partnered with
Sony to be included on Blu-Ray players and other devices. Echoing a refrain often heard in the over-the-air radio industry,
Steel says: “Success for my team looks like Pandora being available on pretty much any connected entertainment device.”

Where do I begin?

This is not "echoing a refrain" often heard in the over-the-air radio industry.

It is a fundamentally different notion to get Pandora integrated into a piece of electronics, let alone a car, than it is to integrate a radio.  We should not assume Pandora is following our lead but rather assume that we are following theirs, and none too successfully.

Pandora is new and fresh and shiny and popular among the young and/or hip.

Radio is not and not and not and popular among the older and/or not so hip.

Yes, our cumes are massive.  But this is not about who uses the radio, it's about who loves the radio.

And radios will only follow the audiences who love them.

The call for radios to be integrated into devices that never used to contain them is one which could have been made a generation ago.  Where were we then?  Indeed, the time to get a radio in a toaster was 1985, not 2010.  Today, such a move would be viewed as a gimmick, not a value-add.

Pandora, on the other hand, is all value-add.

Radio must to be pushed into devices which don't already contain them, while Pandora can be pulled in – by audience or consumer demand.

If you make cars or electronic gadgets, which will you respond to faster, "push" or "pull"?

The largest concern you should have is that Pandora's entry into the auto market – something I view as inevitable – has the potential to create a complete substitute for your (music-oriented) radio station.  And this will happen much faster than you think.

Remember what PPM tells us:  "Fulfill expectations."  Well, if "more music" is your expectation, Pandora is a better radio station than you are.  And it's certainly better tuned to my tastes than yours is.

So what are you going to do?

Lobby for more FM and AM dials in more places, or redefine what radio means for a generation which craves novelty, freshness and innovation?

View Comments
  • Greg
    I have followed Mark's posts for as long as he has been posting about HD Radio (which Mark and I haven't always agreed upon), but Mark has always been fair and honest. It is certaily refreshing to find a media consultant with integrity, including John Gorman and Jerry Del Colliano. For example, I have run across more than one consultant that obviously had an agenda for HD Radio, and attacked me personally for posting my views. Mark has given suggestion, after suggestion, to the radio industry to prepare for the future, but I am afraid, it has fallen upon deaf-ears - Mark's post about Pandora is the perfect example. I have always enjoyed and respected Mark's posts, as they are a great source of unbiased information.
  • Nice try at a smear but not nearly nice enough.
    As regular readers of this blog and people who know me know well, I have been providing solid strategies for radio to excel into the future for years.
    Bu I will never stoop to telling an audience what it wants to hear when it should hear instead what it needs to know so it can do what it needs to do.
    That's called integrity.
  • Richard Harker
    Mark, it seems you have a lot more "skin" in the new media game than we have in the radio game. You've been predicting radio's implosion for what, four years now? A lot of the "radio killers" you've highlighted in the past don't even exist anymore, and radio just keeps chugging along. And you question our credibility? Pandora will fold, just like SpiralFrog, Ruckus, Seeqpod, Songbeat, and others.
  • Greg
    "Mark, I have to disagree that a selection of songs on its own has the value you suggest it does, a juke-box is only a juke-box, no matter how you package it."
    Is that why 180,000,000 iPods have sold?
  • You're assuming a static world, Terry.
    It may be a juke-box now, but it's MY juke-box, not everybody elses.
    It may be a juke-box now, but it need not ALWAYS be that way.
    The argument is not about how much money they will make. After all, their bar is set much lower than Radio's. Craigslist doesn't make Newspaper-style money, but that doesn't make it any less valuable to its audience.
    Customization clearly has value.
    And by the way, there's nothing keeping radio from customizing....
    ...but itself.
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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