There
was a bit of a stir when WOSU announced the call letters of Classical 101’s new repeater station
licensed to Granville: WOSX.
A few people said that combining “S” and “X” is potentially
suggestive.
However,
at the ribbon cutting for new station, Tom Rieland, General Manager of WOSU
Public Media, joked, “We’re bringing sexy
radio to Granville.”
Rieland
and other folks from WOSU assembled in the Carriage
House of the Granville Inn last Monday afternoon (3/2) at 3:00pm to welcome
the WOSX.
The
first full piece heard on the new station was Peter Boyer’s “Celebration Overture.
The
expansion of Classical 101 is
important for WOSU Public Media. NPR News on WOSU is very successful. But Classical 101 reaches a much smaller
audience. WOSA only covers a portion of the Columbus metro.
Classical WOSA’s coverage area
|
In
the January 2020 PPM ratings WOSU was third in the market with an AQH share of
4.3 and 148,300 estimated weekly listeners.
WOSA (combined with WOSU HD-2) had
a 1.2 AQH share and 52,500 weekly listeners.
The addition of WOSX roughly
doubles Classical 101’s coverage area.
You
might recall that WOSX used to be WDUB The Doobie until Denison University sold
the license to WOSU Public Media for a pittance, around $5,000, and a bunch of underwriting
credits.
Though
the folks from WOSU are celebrating, the sale of KDUB happened because the
university decided that the station didn’t matter and was expendable. This
pattern is happening across the nation.
Last
Friday (3/6) we reported on this trend and we offered advice for the
remaining student stations that are still operating.
We
believe that he major reason why universities are pulling the plug on their
“campus” stations is that university leaders feel that the station brings
nothing of value to the institution.
In
other words, the “feel good” is over and the focus now is ROI, return on
investment.
DON'T HIDE! STAY VISIBLE AND BE RELEVANT TO YOUR LICENSEE
Our
post apparently hit a nerve because it had almost 2,000 page-views as of
Saturday. Plus we received ample advice from Spark News readers. Here is a bit of the feedback:
• From a Content Director
at a NPR News station at a top 20 market station who asked that we not use the
person’s name:
“The best way a student
station can stay visible if by using your number asset: Your air-time and
reach. Consider doing a monthly “meet
the university president” show where the prez is interviewed.”
“Use your free,
ubiquitous signal and programming to make the station as visible as possible.
Broadcast live from the student union. Above all, don’t hide away from the
administration.”
• From Nathan Moore, GM
of WTJU and WXTJ at the University of Virginia:
Thanks for the interview
with Dave Black. He's a good guy, who I knew a little bit back when I was on
staff at WORT in Madison.
Back in 2010-11, when
there was another wave of colleges dropping their stations, the good folks at
Radio Survivor published a few articles chock full of good advice:
Jennifer Waits: 9 Tips to
Ensure College Radio’s Survival [link]
Paul Riismandel: The
mediageek’s advice for college stations, parts 1 & 2 [link]
• From Izzi Smith,
Content officer at WBEZ:
Hi Ken - Have you/will
you do any reporting on stations that have good/productive relationships with
their schools? Maybe talk with Jack Casey at WERS in Boston (Emerson College).
Disclosure - I'm an alum.
KEN SAYS: Coming soon!
There's a distinction to
be made between "student-run college radio" and "university
licensee public radio stations." They are usually very different animals.
I've seen most
university's go with one of two paradigms:
#1 The [station] belongs in the Outreach
department; OR
(2) The station belongs
in the journalism and communications school (or curriculum). I've always
thought #2 is a better move.
“When I worked a wholly
student-run college radio station, it existed in a third scenario, which is
that it was under Student Activities, albeit with connections to the
communications department.”
“It depends entirely on
the students in charge at any given time as well as the communications
faculty's ability to be good mentors when need (is there anyone on faculty
who's done more than 5 minutes of commercial radio in the 80s, for example).”
• From Aaron Read,
IT/Engineering Director at The Public’s Radio in Providence:
Aaron Read |
Be visible to your
campus community. This ties in to relevance. People must know about you before they
can decide you're relevant.
If you want to prevent a
sale, you need to take active steps. Whereas "flying under the radar"
used to be a good way to be safe, today it prevents nothing and ensures that if
and when your college decides to sell, it'll be too late to do anything about
it. Take the following steps now:
Be Relevant
to your Campus Community.
Be Visible
to your Campus Community.
Be
Integrated with Projects/Programs Important to your Administration.
Be Fiscally
Self-Sufficient (most important!).
Full disclosure, Ken is quoting from a blog post I wrote waaaay back in 2011 yet I feel it's just as relevant today.
ReplyDeletehttp://friedbagels.blogspot.com/2011/12/protecting-your-college-radio-station.html
And bear in mind, I wrote that not long after I'd left WEOS/WHWS-LP in part because WEOS had been LMA'd to a bigger nearby public radio outlet (WXXI). I thought we'd done the first three things pretty well, especially with WHWS-LP. But I fell woefully short on the last one, and the college decided a $250k/yr subsidy was not sustainable anymore. (unfortunately, they insisted on a lot of things that really hampered our ability to raise money, but in hindsight there are many things I could've done much differently, too)
BTW, if you're going to talk to WERS, I would also suggest talking to Warren "Koz" Koziereski at WBSU (SUNY Brockport) and Bruce Avery at WRHU (Hofstra University). Those are two stations that, like WERS at Emerson College, come immediately to mind as being part of a formal radio curriculum at their parent colleges.