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Guest post by Bobby Owsinski on Music 3.0Most of us don’t like to admit it, but we do listen to a lot of radio. Granted, it’s mostly in your car these days, but we tend to spend a lot of our lives there, so for at lest some of the time, radio is what we listen to. All of us complain about the radio we’re listening to these days. Large time blocks of commercials, limited and homogenized playlists, and the same songs playing on multiple stations tend to be the biggest irritants. That wasn’t always the case though, and things only changed when radio programmers started to get better data.Radio is built around Aribitron ratings. The higher the rating (meaning that more people are listening), the more they can charge for advertising. Everything is built around how many listeners each station has.Years ago in the “good old days” of radio (as many remember it), ratings were determined by diaries that people filled out by hand about their listening habits. They would mark in the diary whenever they listened to a station and for how long. This was all well and good, but many people in the industry (especially advertisers) were suspicious of the data, and rightfully so. When Arbitron changed to what they called the Portable People Meter, or PPM (a pager-sized device that recorded the inaudible frequencies in radio broadcasts and kept a log of everything a person listened to throughout the day), the truth about what we really were listening to changed.Radio And How Better Data Changed It Forever
While many are unhappy with the repetitive, commercial heavy nature of radio today, it's important to keep in mind that radio was not always this way. In this article we. Continue reading [https://www.hypebot.com/hypebot/2017/07/radio-and-how-better-data-changed-it-forever.html]