Advice | Advertise in Fayetteville

Is Fayetteville Radio Still Relevant To Local Consumers?

Written by Larry Julius | Jul 23, 2019 10:51:00 AM

This year marks 80 years since WFNC became the first radio station in Fayetteville.  From that time, small business owners in Cumberland and Robeson Counties have depended on radio advertising to market their goods and services.

So, it is a fair question for a 21st-century business owner to ask: Is Fayetteville radio is still relevant in the life of North Carolina consumers?

"You wouldn’t know it from all the media coverage focused on streaming video and streaming music," said media expert Doug Schoen in Forbes Magazine, "but recent Nielsen data shows radio actually has the most reach among American media consumers." 

Last week, for instance, significantly more local consumers tuned-in to a Fayetteville radio station than watched local TV, read a local newspaper, or logged-on to a streaming audio site like Pandora and Spotify.

As a matter of fact, more consumers are reached by local radio stations than sign-on to social media like Facebook, use a search engine like Google, go shopping on a site like Amazon, or watch videos on a site like YouTube.  Traditional AM/FM engages more people week-after-week than all web apps and internet sites combined.

Fayetteville radio's omnipresence in the media life of consumers extends to both millennials and teens as well.

Despite a proclivity for all things digital, significantly more millennials tune-in to Fayetteville radio each week than watch local TV or visit streaming audio sites such as Pandora or Spotify.

Just to be clear, millennials aren't casual radio listeners. They spend almost 2 hours per day, every day, glued to their favorite Fayetteville radio stations.

Even among Fayetteville's teenage population, radio has the largest reach of all media.

Last week, according to Nielsen, 29,200 teens tuned-in to Fayetteville radio. On average, each of these listeners spent 90 minutes a day.

The chart below puts into clear perspective how radio fits into a teens media life.

Teens just don't listen to the radio, they immerse themselves in radio. Each day, according to Nielsen, teens spend 4 hours and 32 minutes consuming media. Twenty-five percent of that time is spent with radio.

When considering radio's enormous reach, Mr. Schoen concluded his article in Forbes by saying, ""The implications of results like these are profound for the communications and advertising industries and as a marketing professional with over 35 years of experience, said Forbes' Doug Schoen."  I found this data nothing short of fascinating. It’s quite clear that we should all be paying more attention to radio, its reach and potential to help our businesses. It’s doing the job with expert efficiency.

Radio remains a potent and relevant force for consumers of all ages.  This has led Deloitte, the world's largest business consulting firm to recommend that radio "should be a big part of the mix for those buying advertising."

Deloitte goes on to say, "Radio’s weekly reach—the percentage of people who listen to radio at least once—has been remarkably stable in the United States. Not only has reach hovered around 94 percent for the last few years, but that number is essentially unchanged from the 94.9 percent figure in spring 2001 (when Apple introduced the iPod)."

"Further, an August 2018 Deloitte Global survey found that, of those who report listening to live radio [in the United States], over 70 percent say they listen either every day or on most days. A majority of radio listeners are tuning in as part of their daily lives."