You may find
yourself depressed when you pay attention to news reports in our
newly forming iWorld. Smartphones, anything Apple makes, Pandora,
and the Internet in general are allegedly conspiring to murder our
beloved old fashioned radio medium. And network TV. And
newspapers. Maybe my head is in the sand, but I don’t believe it.
That’s not to say we shouldn’t adapt, modernize, and even lead
iWorld changes. Many radio stations are, and Christian radio is
perfectly positioned to lead the charge going into 2011.
You’re already
likely doing a number of things right: things that even listeners to
non-Christian radio want more of. Take a look at the Alan Burns
Radio deep dives into AC, CHR, and Morning shows from this summer at
http://www.burnsradio.com/HereSheComes.aspx for proof. When
thousands of women who listen to mainstream CHR were asked what they
value, what’s important to them, they put Family, Relationships,
Understanding Themselves, Education, and Music at the top. When
these 18-34 year old women were given choices, they picked “Helping
Others” over “Hollywood Celebrities,” “Taking Care of the
Environment” over “Shopping,” and “Saving Time” over “Sex.”
Yet when you tune
to your market’s 18-34 targeted stations, do you hear them focusing
on things today’s young adult women value most? Doubt it. You
probably hear a lot of network TV rehash, lots of Hollywood dirt,
and pervy DJ’s overdosing on any sexual pun or angle they can find.
I’m not passing judgment on them here. They actually want the same
thing most of us want: the largest possible audience. Most of them
have probably been told that lowest-common-denominator topics
revolving around sex and tabloid trash are the easiest paths to
success.
I contend that as
long as they believe and act on those assumptions, they’re leaving a
lot of listeners on the table. Those listeners will eventually tire
of radio as a medium, leading to our demise. Or, Christian radio
will be packaged in such a high quality, compelling manner that WE
will snag some of those ears. Maybe most of those
ears!
Yes, most.
“But, Mike,” you might say to me in person, “Christian radio can
only grow so much before we max out. Because, let’s face it, being
Christian is a very niche’ thing.” Except that it isn’t. The Pew
Forum says nearly eight out of 10 Americans claim to be Christians.
(http://religions.pewforum.org/reports).
Which begs the question from some: “Why doesn’t my Christian
station have an 80-share then?” That question assumes all your
market’s Christians should naturally have an affinity for AC music
(since that’s all CCM radio is known for in most of the Country).
(Shame on any Christian who might like a little energy, novelty,
fun, youth, twang, Rhythm, whatever, with their music.)
Also, out of those
eight-out-of-ten Christians, how many of them are passionately
proactive in their Faith? Since many agnostics and atheists know
more about the life of Jesus than His active followers, not everyone
(or even a majority) of that 80% clearly fall into being
passionately proactive. (http://religion.blogs.cnn.com/2010/09/28/dont-know-much-about-religion-youre-not-alone-study-finds/?hpt=C1)
Our spiritual ignorance is our own fault. Christian culture at
large, and even many of our “safe for the family” radio formats,
have softened Jesus to the point of irrelevance. And our future
potential listeners see right through it. The book “Almost
Christian” tells us about teens that want to have “steak and potato”
talks about spiritual matters, while the Christian culture elements
they’re surrounded by continue to “serve cake.” (http://articles.cnn.com/2010-08-27/living/almost.christian_1_teens-share-moralistic-therapeutic-deism-dean-talks?_s=PM:LIVING)
What we have here,
when you add up these things: Secular radio alienating its own
audience….80% of them with Christian-leanings….combined with your
station already focused on things those people care about…..combined
with a majority of culture being open to the real Jesus….combined
with them being hungry to talk about Him in deep and meaningful
ways….adds up to: a huge opportunity for you to have a deep,
significant, market-leading relationship with today’s generation.
(Although I’m sure these stats aren’t limited to the under-34 crowd;
it just happens to be my area of passion and focus).
This isn’t a
license to return to Christian radio approaches from decades ago
where you open up the mic and pontificate on King James Scripture.
Or where you have to find a mandatory “God angle” on every song you
backsell or every promotion you cook up. Those tactics are what
gave all things CCM-related such a bad rap for such a long time.
Instead, I’d say that you should simply let your relationship with
Him breathe in and out through your radio job just as it does in
your real life. Unless you’re a judgmental, irrational, pharisaical
person of course. I kid, I kid! OK, I only half kid. If you’re
one of those “bad Christians who happens to good people,” then yeah,
maybe being totally authentic isn’t the right approach. Unless
you’ve recognized your issues and aren’t afraid to publicly, humbly
work them out.
This is a license
to keep doing what you do already for the most part, and
encouragement to make it more fun and engaging for those Christians
in your market who haven’t been tantalized by your station yet.
Radio isn’t dead, and won’t die in 2011. The new Edison Research
report on 12-24 year-olds finds that they still spend more time with
radio than they do with many other things. We’re #3, in fact. But
don’t get happy about being #3. We were #1 just 10 short years
ago. Since 2000, the time we get per week from 12-24’s has been
chopped in half. (http://www.edisonresearch.com/Edison_Research_American_Youth_Study_Radios_Future.pdf).
To decline at the same pace would leave radio devastated by 2020.
But you, yes, YOU,
can do plenty about that. And you should. iWorld or not, it’s your
Biblical calling. See First Corinthians 15:58 and Colossians 3:23.
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Mike Couchman is Program Director and
Afternoon DJ for WAY-FM’s Colorado network. He’s also heard on WRBS/Baltimore,
WAYK-G/Grand Rapids, MI, and WHMX/Bangor, ME). Contact Mike
[email protected]
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