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Archive for the ‘Arbitron’ Category

Monitoring Radio Placements for Public Relations – AQH vs. Cume

Those of us in public relations can all agree that an important issue in our industry is accurate evaluation of the ROI we deliver to clients.  One area that has proven challenging for some is measuring the success of radio outreach, placements and listener numbers from the time(s) a story aired.  The most reliable tracking and reporting data for radio listeners in the United States comes from Arbitron, the consumer research company.  While there may be other important standards like message delivery, positive tone and audience demographics, we all tend to start with the audience numbers.  Let’s examine those numbers and which are best to measure public relations outreach.

Arbitron operates on a subscription basis with radio stations that rely on audience data for their programming, ad sales, etc.   Stations must subscribe to Arbitron to be included in audience research and to receive the results.   Arbitron measures network and local-market radio audiences throughout the United States and publishes results on a quarterly basis.  The published listener information is used by radio stations to set ad rates and sell air time.  From a public relations perspective, the listener information provides the audience reach of stories aired on stations throughout the county.  If you cannot find Arbitron data for a particular station, then you can assume that the station is not an Arbitron subscriber.

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Concerns Of Undercounting Stir Controversy Over New Ratings System

There’s been a great deal of controversy in the radio industry over Arbitron’s new ratings system, the Portable People Meter (PPM).  The PPM is meant to give a more accurate measurement of radio listening, but since its installation, many stations have seen large drops in their ratings, particularly smaller and minority-owned stations.  Many broadcasters are claiming that the PPM system undercounts minority audiences and are refusing to acknowledge the system’s validity. This controversy affects both broadcasters and communications professionals, whether in advertising or public relations, who depend on ratings to show clients a return on investment in Hispanic media.

Arbitron began testing the Portable People Meter in 2000.  It’s a device that one wears like a pager, which picks up encoded audio signals from radio stations.  Arbitron recruits participants by phone who agree to wear the PPM wherever they go, while radio networks encode a special signal into their broadcasts that Arbitron has designed for the PPM to pick up.

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