Mr. Selfridge, a London department owner store, had coined the phrase “the customer is always right” back in 1909. This was 30 years prior to the first Fayetteville radio station, WFNC, going on the air. This was 25 years before Daniel Starch and his rival George Gallup invented the science of market research.
So, in 2018, with terabytes of market research just a mouse-click away, we know anyone who says that ‘nobody listens to local radio’ is wrong. In fact, we know, for sure, that 92% of all consumers, which is almost everybody in Fayetteville, still listens to traditional AM/FM radio.
Last week according to Nielsen, a company that measures the buying and media habits of local consumers, 288,946 adult adults tuned-in to a Fayetteville radio station. This is substantially more than watch local TV, read a local newspaper, or hook-up to streaming audio sites like Pandora or Spotify.
When presented with the facts, the misguided customer owned-up a bit and said, “Okay, people my age might still listen to the radio (he was in his late 40s), but the kids don’t.” With apologies to Mr. Selfridge, I told the customer that he is still wrong.
“Fayetteville radio,” I explained, “reaches about 9-in-10 people in every age group. This includes members of Generation X, Y, and Z, Millennials, and Boomers. Everybody.”
Media expert, Gordon Borrell, CEO of Borrell Associates, advises, “Everything we’ve read about listening and aging audiences would have us believe that only our grandmother is listening to radio. Turns out the industry’s biggest supporters, the radio advertisers who foot the bills, aren’t buying that at all. Radio works, and the listeners are telling us in the latest survey data that radio has one helluva return-on-investment.”
Many North Carolina small business owners support Mr. Borrell’s claims. This includes Amie Crouter, co-owner of Cape Fear Flooring.
After 18 years, Cape Fear Flooring still advertises on Fayetteville radio. “Radio advertising has really driven our growth from the beginning,” says Ms. Crouter. “We have always asked new customers how they found out about us. Overwhelmingly, we are told they heard our radio commercials.”
“Since we started advertising on the radio, we’ve never stopped,” she says. “Advertising on Fayetteville radio has provided an excellent return-on-investment for us.”
Based on 18 years of successful radio advertising experience, Ms. Crouter knows her customers still listen to Fayetteville radio
“If you’re business is going to advertise on Fayetteville radio,” she advises, “then you just can’t do it once. That won’t work. If you have commercials on consistently and stick to it, then you will get results.”
James Grafstrom, General Manager of Fayetteville's Crown Complex, can attest to radio's ubiquity. He knows everybody is listening.
“Although the media landscape has changed, no
“They might not have a chance to look at the newspaper that day, or check Facebook,” Mr. Grafstrom continues, “but because they are captive in their cars, we can reach them with our message, even if it just for 15 or 30 seconds. I see this as a real value to keep The Crown Complex top-of-mind in our community.”