Originally posted by Lateralthinking1
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But we do know that a "Radio 2 listener" and a "Radio 4 listener" tends to prefer CFM to Radio 3. It follows then that any attempt to appeal to such listeners, and to CFM listeners, is going to involve narrowing the gap between Radio 3 and the more popular/populist CFM. And maybe becoming more familiar in style for R2 listeners.
Alarmingly, the BBC Trust is on record as saying that Radio 3 listeners are 'a subset' of the Radio 4 listeners, on the grounds that the majority does listen to Radio 4 (whereas the reverse, of course, is not the case). Some listener, some subset! They would need to show that the 70%+ mentioned above is made up of predominantly Radio 4 listeners who do switch to Radio 3. But if they are predominantly Radio 3 listeners who listen - in varying amounts - to Radio 4 the description doesn't hold.
We also know that some 92% of Radio 3 listeners listen to classical music (not necessarily exclusively). That compares with single figure or low double percentages listening to the each of the other musical genres. This may well explain why CFM gained its highest figures (more than 1m more than now) in the early 2000s. This was when Radio 3 tripled its non classical output: one can surmise that many R3 listenrs switched to CFM when there was no classical music on R3. It would also explain the apparent drop in CFM's figures when the strategy was abruptly changed and the non classical output was reduced again.
In my view, that 92% figure - and the fact that R4 listeners prefer CFM, makes the R3 listener no subset of anything, but an audience sharing a variety of interests, but centring mainly on classical music.
On costs, what on earth is it they now do on R1 that makes it more expensive than R3?
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