Originally posted by french frank
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Latest RAJARs
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Originally posted by Constantbee View PostDon't know a lot about RAJAR figures, but are they national or global these days?
I did notice that Q1 seems, historically, to have recorded a spike but the most confusing point is that Q1 in 2017 was very poor for Radio 3 which gives the impression, if year-on-year comparisons are made, that Radio 3 has done spectacularly well this quarter. It's very comfortable, but the 11% rise quoted as somehow being a great triumph is rubbish. If a station does very badly one year and recovers the next year, it's a relief not a spectacular success.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostI did notice that Q1 seems, historically, to have recorded a spike but the most confusing point is that Q1 in 2017 was very poor for Radio 3 which gives the impression, if year-on-year comparisons are made, that Radio 3 has done spectacularly well this quarter. It's very comfortable, but the 11% rise quoted as somehow being a great triumph is rubbish. If a station does very badly one year and recovers the next year, it's a relief not a spectacular success.And the tune ends too soon for us all
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Originally posted by Constantbee View PostAlso, a bit dense of me, but I think I got the quarters wrong If the Q1-Q4 figures tie in with the financial year, then Q1 is going to be April - June, isn't it?It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by Constantbee View PostThanks for this. I'm curious about the seasonal peaks in Q1 for 2013, 2014 and 2015. If I understand this correctly Q1 must be the winter quarter, so that would be January to March, then. The trend changes in 2016, though. We see the same rise but continuing into Q2, so we might be seeing the continuation of a seasonal effect. Then the peaks become more frequent. You'd can't say a lot without a closer look at the data, but I would like to know what happened in 2016. A possible explanation might be a move away from live listening to 'listen again'. Competition with Cfm is an obvious explanation, but then a lot of forumites are actually going over - at least temporarily - to foreign based serious music stations, like France Musique, so there is competition from elsewhere.
Don't know a lot about RAJAR figures, but are they national or global these days?
For example, for Q1/2018 the assumed UK radio-listening population is 54466000. The sample for the 12 weeks of the quarter was 22219. Therefore for every person who claimed to listen to R3 for at least 5 minutes in a week the calculated reach is 54466000*12/22219, i.e. 29415.9.
Therefore to get the Q1/2018 reach figure for R3 of 1933000 requires an average of 65.7 respondents claiming they've listened to R3 for 5 minutes in a week, or 788.6 over the quarter.
The change in reach from the previous quarter of -18000 requires a change of only -0.6 respondents per week, or 7 over the quarter. I would think that this is well within any sampling error.
Similar figures for the Breakfast reach are 21.6 per week for the reach and +0.9 per week for the change.
The updated chart is below. Note that I've averaged over 4 quarters (green line) and 20 quarters (red line) to give some smoothing and to show a trend.
The next chart shows the changes quarter to quarter for a number of stations, showing the volatility of the numbers. It seems that for R3, swings in the range of roughly +/- 10% per quarter are the norm.
I'll add another chart later which shows the trend of reach against population, which is quite interesting.
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This one's fascinating - it clearly shows the level of volatility where R3's figures are concerned. And yet, and yet, the figures aren't completely random. Having 12 or 13 completely different panels each week in a quarter still somehow ends up with a roughly (all right, very roughly) ballpark figure. No quarter ever sinks to 1.5m (or less), nor rises to 2.5m (or more). So the figures are registering something …
Originally posted by Andrew Slater View PostThe next chart shows the changes quarter to quarter for a number of stations, showing the volatility of the numbers. It seems that for R3, swings in the range of roughly +/- 10% per quarter are the norm.
It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by french frank View PostThis one's fascinating - it clearly shows the level of volatility where R3's figures are concerned. And yet, and yet, the figures aren't completely random. Having 12 or 13 completely different panels each week in a quarter still somehow ends up with a roughly (all right, very roughly) ballpark figure. No quarter ever sinks to 1.5m (or less), nor rises to 2.5m (or more). So the figures are registering something …
A better plot might be deviation from long term average.
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In today's Telegraph (I don't subscribe so for detail, I will await the actual speech of which this seems to be a 'the Sunday Telegraph has seen' leak): https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/201...enge-podcasts/
So perhaps one can hope for a return to quality mattering over total priority being given to numb-skulled attempts to seduce some sort of mythical/only-on-a-whiteboard-in-a-BBC-conference-room 'great new audience'....?"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Originally posted by Caliban View PostIn today's Telegraph (I don't subscribe so for detail, I will await the actual speech of which this seems to be a 'the Sunday Telegraph has seen' leak): https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/201...enge-podcasts/
So perhaps one can hope for a return to quality mattering over total priority being given to numb-skulled attempts to seduce some sort of mythical/only-on-a-whiteboard-in-a-BBC-conference-room 'great new audience'....?
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You can um and an ah but it looks like competition for the sake of competition. Not this one so that one. I can hardly be bothered unless and until they aren't all power merchants with no ideas. Look - a politician's favourite word - I've stuck on commercial puppets and people arguing the toss. With that spirit, they have quite entertaining facts in their head and are not Love Island. Clear blue water.....I meant it.....not the BBC and not formulaic. But for heaven's sake, Spotify and ilk. One is the master of one's own domain there. There is no Zoe or Petroc around which to decide "well they are alright really but they have chosen what they like or what is liked by the production people who reel then in". It makes no sense. What are they going to do? Turn every BBC radio station into the pre pubescent 30s? It won't work. They will be on their I-extensions which have already put paid to that phrase "my other half". I'm pleased in a way. It means they aren't ostensibly cannibal towards human bodily juices. Other than that, I'm seeing money munching, trite, and aimlessness, Purnell at the helm.
This is bloody marvellous - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LXkM11kp_tgLast edited by Lat-Literal; 18-06-18, 22:37.
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Originally posted by Zucchini View PostPurnell's speech to EBU on Tuesday:
(Mainly puff with escape routes if challenged on anything … )
"I care about audience figures. We want audiences to love our programmes. We want to attract audiences who don’t use us. We want young people to spend more time with us."
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Originally posted by DracoM View Post" we want young people to spend more time with us."
Well, in that case they need to try a bleeping bleeping deal harder then.
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Stop press: R3 has sickly RAJAR figures this quarter … again (1.908m, from Q-o-Q 1.933m, and Y-o-Y 2.062m). Percentage reach down from the magic 4% to 3% (I'd wondered whether 3.48% would be rounded up to 3.5%, to be rounded up again to the usual 4% - but RAJAR not having any of that nonsense).
Breakfast figures have held up pretty well (636k), and I'll assume Essential Classics has also continued to do well so … since the overall reach has been struggling to reach 2 million for four quarters in a row, what part of the day is losing the listeners? Is the solution to dumb down the rest of R3 to the level of the morning programmes?
[Thought on a use of the term Dumbing Down: it marks the relationship between the content and the supposed audience e.g. popular music could be 'dumbing down' if the audience is expecting classical music, but not if it's on a popular music station. A programme for 10-year-olds is 'dumbing down' if the expected audience consists of adult classical music lovers, but not if the audience is 10-year-olds.]It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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