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Seth Godin highlights from the Country Radio Seminar

These notes are courtesy of KMPS's Tony Thomas:

Radio used to be “perfect.” So was the music business. It used to be all so clear.
Scarcity used to be the reality for radio and records – no longer true.
In 4 years, every Ford pickup will ship with Wi-Fi included. For radio, how many competing stations will there be then? 

Seth godinSeth outlined the concepts from The Long Tail relating to music choice.
As for the music business – “the strategy of suing your fans didn't exactly work out.” 

“Timid trapeze artists are dead trapeze artists.” 

Talked about permission. How many of your listeners are waiting to hear from you? “Date” your listeners.
How did the Grateful Dead sell out shows without hits? They had a relationship with their fans. 

It's not about listeners tolerating your station or music, it’s about them loving it.
If you're giving your listeners something they love, they will pay attention. “Pay” you – with their attention. 

Tribal management. We have more tribes than people to lead them. There’s the opportunity.
You can't be mediocre and expect people to follow you. And the tribe is looking for a heretic. Heretics go out on a limb.
All the tech you need to lead a tribe is everywhere and it’s free.
You build a tribe one convert at a time, who wants you to succeed.
Members of a tribe desperately care about an issue. 

Old model – finding customers for our products. New model – finding products for our customers. 

Step 1: be brilliant. 

Step 2: tell a story. 

Step 3: tribe members will spread the word. 

Is your future dependent on yesterday holding on just a little bit longer? 

Your product possibilities are limited only by your imagination. 

Create a culture with rituals, a “secret handshake.”
Help your tribe members to connect.
You don’t need charisma to do this. Doing it, leading your tribe, will give you charisma. 

Stand for something. Have a manifesto. Persuade 10 people. They will spread it. If you can’t persuade 10 people, you don’t have a strong enough message. 

Don't go after an existing tribe. Find the group that's out there with no one to lead them. 

Don't get hung up on tactics. Focus on whether or not you have something worth following. 

“Radio ads are spam.” 

Magazine readers look at ads because they're aimed at them.
It's not easy to educate advertisers to think about this (permission).
Represent the tribe to the advertiser. Then you have the power.

If I ran a station, I'd reward people on how they serve the tribe. How they defend the tribe.
The old AOL defended their business model, not their tribe. And lost them. 

Consumers are looking for authenticity in your brand. That you're keeping your promises. 

Question on to do this at a corporate station. Seth: “maybe you don't.” Ask for the chance to try, and show results. “Either your boss gets it, or leave her behind.”
View Comments
  • People will still consume media and listen to the hits, but how they receive their information will change.. Just look how the internet has effected newspapers and the even post office. People don't write letters anymore. The music industry is fighting a losing battle resisting change, as the Internet has already altered their future. Radio is facing a similar battle like print, in that young people consider radio old school and traditional media dollars are being shifted towards measurable webmatrics. Instead of print going out, the story might be radio stations are going dark!
    Nationwide internet access is coming to your car. And every car will be plugged in with free access, paid for by advertisers. Nationwide web access is huge, as every industry will be hungry for access to reach and stay in contact with their customers. Even your car will be in constant contact with the factory as you cruise down the highway. Don't underestimate the enormous impact nationwide web access is going to have on your life and the media!
    Cable is being laid for DSL in areas of the country that so far have not been connected. Almost 100% of the country will be web enabled in some form. Prepare change you can see with your eyes and hear with your ears is coming.
  • Great conversation here, gang!
  • "Cultural lock-in" - the inability to change the corporate culture even in the face of clear market threats. (pp. 16)
    http://www.mckinsey.com/ideas/books/creativedestruction/CDch1.pdf
    It's sad, really. I even heard an optimistic sales executive explain that all of the failing newspaper ad revenue was destined for radio.
  • It might be helpful to define our terms.
    Niche doesn't only mean small & insubstantial. That's a bias we should to shed.
    Niche is relative.
    We already employ niches in radio - Rock Radio - is a NICHE of MUSIC radio for example. We split it further with CLASSIC ROCK, and ALTERNATIVE ROCK. Each "split" makes the potential audience smaller - but more engaged.
    Obviously there's a business limit with how far we can split NICHES on the radio BROADCAST.
    The Radio transmitter based business is capitalized in a way that demands it reach MASS. That could change - but the more obvious path is using the internet.
    In a backhanded compliment sort of way, I do think "radio" will eventually get this.
    But it will be when, and only because radio follows the money. It will take pain to make change.
    When enough ad dollars migrate away from our mass networks and into more focused offers - radio companies WILL follow the money.
    The main question for me becomes - will it be too late if we wait that long?
  • "How did the Grateful Dead sell out shows without hits? They had a relationship with their fans."
    Didn't radio once invent selling and capturing listeners through relationships?
    Now, today, clients & listeners are numbers on a page or viewed as transactions and goals. Imagine treating your wife like clients, as a transaction...
    "It's not about listeners tolerating your station or music, it’s about them loving it"
    I hate listening to 10 spots in a row..
    I hate listening to the same 200 songs over and over.
    I hate radio's none-local national sound.
    I hate radio's repetitive uncreative sound.
    I hate how every station sounds the same.
    I hate robotic sounding DJ's and voice tracking..
    I guess Arbitron, con-sultants & the researchers knows more than I do.
    But what do I know I'm just a stupid listener.
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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