Between the Lines

Larry Dignan, Andrew Nusca and Rachel King

Internet radio eyes commute hours for lucrative growth potential

By | October 12, 2010, 11:03am PDT

Summary: As Internet radio services such as Pandora grow and mobile broadband connections get better, the market for targeted programming - and advertising - during the commute hours gets more interesting.

A few years ago, when XM Radio and Sirius first started talking about a merger of their companies, the National Association of Broadcasters started throwing red flags everywhere, crying foul over a monopoly that would harm traditional “free” broadcast radio.

I remember arguing at the time that a combined XM and Sirius would hardly create some sort of evil monopoly that would prompt listeners to dump AM or FM for XM. Listeners, especially those in a car, had plenty of options, the iPod connected to the car being the biggest at the time.

Of course, the merger went through and AM and FM are still around. But now there’s another threat looming around out there - Pandora.

A Bloomberg piece today highlighted the company’s growth, notably the lure of big-named advertisers and the chase for the lucrative “drive-time” traffic market. Clearly, the commute hours are key times for advertisers to reach a large audience.

Oh sure, many commuters spend their drives gabbing away on the cell phone while they’re stuck in traffic. And many have iPods and their customized music playlists. But there are plenty of others who are shifting from one channel to the next in hopes of finding a tune that will make that sea of brake lights a bit less stressful.

In its post, Bloomberg quotes Scott Kelly, digital marketing manager at Ford, which is also advertising on Pandora:

The advantage of Pandora is marketers can target users based on age, gender, home ZIP code and musical taste, letting them deliver more relevant ads than what’s possible on regular radio… It’s very intimate. Because Pandora knows so much about the user and who they are, where they’re listening and what artists they like, it really lets us hone in on that message.

A couple of things to think about:

  • Despite recently turning a profit, Pandora still has financial challenges that stem, in part, from the compensation fees that it pays to broadcast music tracks on its service.
  • Internet radio is still a much smaller player than traditional radio, with a mere 3 percent of total radio ad sales reaching Web-based companies.
  • The streaming music service is still largely dependent on the Internet connections - whether that’s a broadband connection on the home PC or a 3G/4G link over a mobile device, such as a smartphone. Commuters streaming Internet radio depend on the mobile data services offered by the wireless carriers, which have been pushing away from unlimited plans and heading more toward tiered usage pricing.
  • And then there’s the competition. Sure, Pandora is a big name in this growing industry but others, including CBS’ Last.fm, Slacker and Spotify, are also in the space. As the services take off and money starts pouring in, you can almost guarantee that others will pop up, as well.

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Sam has been a technology and business blogger for more than 18 years.

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Sam Diaz

Sam Diaz has nothing to disclose.

Biography

Sam Diaz

Sam has been a technology and business blogger, reporter and editor at ZDNet, the Washington Post, San Jose Mercury News and Fresno Bee for more than 18 years. He's a member of the National Association of Hispanic Journalists and a graduate of California State University, Fresno.

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RE: Internet radio eyes commute hours for lucrative growth potential
jasonemmg 13th Oct 2010
I recently purchased a Western Digital TV LIVE PLUS media player. I get Pandora, YouTube, Netflix,etc..

The main reason for the purchase it to be able to listen to my collection of mp3's wirelessly through my home theater system. Mostly MY CD collection ripped to mp3 format so that I can listen to my music collection on my mp3 player, burn to CD/DVD, and now my media player anywhere in the house or on the road.
Pandora, Slacker, both are jokes. No content to speak of. If I want to just listen to music, I can use my own music library.
"But there are plenty of others who are shifting from one channel to the next in hopes of finding a tune that will make that sea of brake lights a bit less stressful.
"

And most of that channel hopping is driven by the fact there are too many commercials. So how exactly does Pandora (with commercials) solve that problem. This sounds like the big push for HD radio. Problem was, it was the same crappy commericals all the time, but in HD audio.

Fundamentally, people are sick of advertising. While there are many that say it is actually effective, a straw poll of my friends indicates few, if any, of our (poll group) buying decisions are based on advertising.

Personally, most of the time I do Sirius or iPod. The times I am stuck with FM only are mostly spent channel hopping looking for a station playing music.
@7mgte

Finally some reasonable comments. I haven't fallen for the iPod, but my car's CD player plays MP3's on CD as well as prerecorded or ripped CD's. However one does get tired of listening to their own play lists after a while. My alternative is NPR (National Public Radio). User supported, commercial free radio. There is nothing more irritating than listening to commercials or radio DJ's that are nothing more than just noise.
@7mgte

When you said:

`There is nothing more irritating than listening to commercials or radio DJ's that are nothing more than just noise. `

you sir hit the nail on the proverbial `head`. If I am driving, the LAST thing I want to hear is a bunch of morons yapping away on the radio. With the consolidation of radio stations in the larger markets being owned by a few corporate conglomerates, radio has become a `wasteland`.

Listener `push back` comes in the form of iPods and mp3 players. Advertisers can go straight to h--- with their obnoxious commercials. They try to `buy` audiences with `free money giveaways` and other such silly s---, but we all know that there is no such thing as a `free lunch`. We do not owe the broadcasters anything. Like newspapers, if they can not adapt, then they will become extinct.
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The are many advantages to Internet radio. The receiver marketed is seeded by smart phones. It puts power back in the hands of the radio station owners, for example, Clear Channel's "I Heart Radio" app. It opens up custom music services like Pandora and Last.fm. It compresses space, in the sense that now I can listen to that favorite station 1000 or more miles away.
I recently purchased a Western Digital TV LIVE PLUS media player. I get Pandora, YouTube, Netflix,etc..

The main reason for the purchase it to be able to listen to my collection of mp3's wirelessly through my home theater system. Mostly MY CD collection ripped to mp3 format so that I can listen to my music collection on my mp3 player, burn to CD/DVD, and now my media player anywhere in the house or on the road.

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