You’re at a concert where a deejay comes out on the
stage before the show to make some announcements. He goes on so long that you
can feel the audience getting impatient. They have come to this hall to hear
music, not some stupid deejay.
The point of this story is that listeners
generally do not tune in to a music radio station to hear a deejay trying to be
clever or cute. They tune in because they like the music the station plays.
Here’s the key to maximizing your station’s
potential: be concise. Be the station of few words. Deejays should be prepared
every time they go on the air. Some deejays have a tendency to meander. They
talk in circles, many times about nothing. They take phone calls from listeners
with nothing interesting to say. This is usually done in the name of
entertainment. But who is being entertained?
Imagine you go to a nightclub to see a comedian. The
comedian comes on stage and has no routine prepared. He just walks out and
starts interacting with the audience. Some comedians can pull this off, and it
could be very funny. But this level of comedian is very rare. Instead, most
comedians have a routine that they have rehearsed and prepared, with very
specific timing and rhythm. It’s this focus that keeps the skit moving along
and interesting.
Many deejays spend their time doing things other
than preparing for their next on-air break. One of my favorite examples is the
time I walked into the control room at a legendary rock radio station. The live deejay on the air had his monitor turned all the way down with his back to the
control board, reading a book. Twenty seconds before the song ended, a light
flashed, letting him know the song was ending. He spun around in his chair,
opened his microphone, backsold the music, started the next element, turned the
monitor back down, and then spun around in his chair to continue reading. If
this person isn’t even listening to the station, what about his audience?
Prepared deejays think about how they are going to
use their precious few moments on mic to share as much pertinent information as
they can, in an entertaining manner. A radio station has forward momentum with
a focused deejay. Some radio stations have even installed 40-second timer
clocks that start flashing lights in the deejay’s face when time is up, and
some have even gone as far as installing microphone disablers after a certain
amount of time. These kinds of heavy-handed restrictions don’t really get to
the root of the problem.
Besides the live talk elements, keep all of the
recorded stagers, drops and seg-assists short and to the point, too. With so many
listening choices, as soon as a radio station begins to meander, you are giving
listeners the chance to tune away to see what else is available. Keep
everything that’s not music concise and to the point. Be a station of few
words, and each word will carry more weight.
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