Anyone seen any comment by the BBC and/or R3 on the latest figures ....... ?????
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Originally posted by doversoul1 View PostAnything Radio 3 can learn from this?
Zoe Ball’s BBC Radio 2 breakfast show sheds 780,000 listeners
https://www.theguardian.com/media/20...oses-listeners
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Originally posted by antongould View PostAnyone seen any comment by the BBC and/or R3 on the latest figures ....... ?????
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Originally posted by Zucchini View Post
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Originally posted by antongould View PostThank you very much ...... not much of a change for R3 then .....
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostThere is a slight increase, both on last month and (somewhat greater) on last year. I don't think access via third-party download facilities is included (how could it be?) There is not even a need to login to the Beeb to listen via that route.
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Should we not acknowledge that Classic FM has increased its popularity in the last quarter, partly by breathing new life into Presenters deemed past their best by the BBC , e.g. Moira Stuart?
What's the moral? Possibly, that building on one's established audience base is more facile than throwing the (old) baby out with the bath-water.
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Originally posted by antongould View PostAgreed but ff always used to remind us to look at one result in isolation ........
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Originally posted by edashtav View PostShould we not acknowledge that Classic FM has increased its popularity in the last quarter, partly by breathing new life into Presenters deemed past their best by the BBC , e.g. Moira Stuart?
What's the moral? Possibly, that building on one's established audience base is more facile than throwing the (old) baby out with the bath-water.
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Originally posted by LMcD View PostThe moral is possibly that the name of the presenter is at least as important as, or more important than, the musical content of the programme.
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I came across this analysis of the latest figures by Accident
"Although, year-on-year, there was an increase of 120k Weekly Listeners on Average (WLoA), from ‘low’ to ‘lowish average’, most of that increase is accounted for by a mammoth rise in Breakfast listening – up by 107k WLoA (636k to 743k). Were those ‘additional’ – unlikely to be all new-to R3 – listeners only listening to Breakfast, or perhaps to a bit of Breakfast and a bit of Essential Classics? Or were they listening to a wide range of programmes, from Composer of the Week, the lunchtime and evening concerts, The New Music Show? We don’t know.
What we do know is that the average time spent listening also went up year-on-year – from 6 hours per week to 6.5 hours per listener. That is the equivalent of every listener (i.e. all of the 2m+) listening to Breakfast for an extra 6 minutes per day, Monday-Friday.
“Statistically, the idea that all Radio 3 listeners:- a) listen to Breakfast in the first place and b) that every one of them increased their Breakfast listening to the programme by that 6 minutes is a non-starter as an explanation. What does seem a reasonable hypothesis is to link/connect the three significant leaps this quarter: station reach (up by 120k) + Breakfast reach (up by 107k) + average listening (up by 30 mins per week). So 2 ½ hours of Breakfast, followed by 3 hours of Essential Classics provide ample and convenient space for an extra slab of listening per day and seem more likely to have occurred than that a large chunk of the 107k listeners tuned in purely to hear 30 mins of This Classical Life or Classical Fix."
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostI have not listened to CFM for a very long time, the dynamic compression causing me far too much ennui. What is the style of Moira Stuart's presentation? Could that have something to do with the relative popularity of the programmes she presides over?
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