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Seriously? 93 Percent of Americans Still Listen to Broadcast Radio...

Wednesday, June 13, 2012
by  paul

That's according to the latest stats shared by Arbitron, whose half-year report shows a substantial gain in listeners year-over-year.  The tally shows that roughly 93 percent of Americans over the age of 12 - ie, 242.1 million users - tune into traditional, broadcast radio at least once a week.  The broader US population is now pushing past 313 million, with a substantial chunk (ie, approximately 15 percent or so) under the age of 12.

This is exactly what it sounds like: old-school, broadcast radio, not satellite, internet, or mobile-based streams.  Actually, we thought there was something wrong with that stats, but Arbitron confirmed that this indeed refers to traditional broadcasting.  "This data is for only over-the-air broadcasts," an Arbitron executive told to Digital Music News.    

And they also told us that nearly 600,000 new listeners have joined since last year.  The 18-34 set was a strong contributor, though the overlapping 25-54 demographic displayed declines.  

All of which seems to raise the question: why the near saturation, especially given all the complaints people have about this format?  This isn't the first report to show this extreme level of usage, despite lots of repetition, lots of breaks, and stunningly little format variety.  And, despite huge competition from satellite radio, Pandora, and non-radio formats like Spotify, all of whom are encroaching upon the dashboard.

Perhaps out of all the possible explanations, convenience and ease-of-use is the strongest.  Radio is something you just turn on, it sits on your dashboard, and it doesn't require subscriptions, contracts, or apps.  On top of that, there's a common listening experience that remains completely unmatched by Pandora, Sirius, Songza, or even Turntable.fm.  Because no matter how schlocky and repetitive, there are probably millions dialed into the same call letters at any given moment.

There's comfort in that.





  • Comments Closed
    Comments (21)

    CBQ Wednesday, June 13, 2012

    "tune in once a week" - this stat standing on its own is meaningless without adding to it the number of times other media are used per week

    So it's a case of "So what?" til, the numbers are expanded.

    I never listen to radio due to the prattling shite of DJs, interruptions for news, weather and ads - I've spent money on music I want to hear, why would I listen to someone else's choice?

     

     


    lsapadin Wednesday, June 13, 2012

    My guess is that most of that is the clock radio while getting dressed every morning. Take that out of the equation, and you're probably left with more like 10%.


    Nikki Wednesday, June 13, 2012

    "Take that out of the equation, and you're probably left with more like 10%."


    I disagree. My guess is MANY people have switched from old school clock radios to letting their cell phone wake them up (that's what I've done).

    The obvious answer is "CARS". People still drive cars, and all those kids between 12-16 still ride in cars with their parents. That probably provides the lion share of radio listening. I still listen to my radio in the car everyday, though I have an iPod, Spotify, blah blah blah.

    Of course, I'm listening to NPR everyday, not music radio. Music radio gets turned on 0-1 times a week, because of the limitations mentioned in the article.


    croels Wednesday, June 13, 2012

    I agree with Nikki, not everyone listens to Spotify, Pandora etc, but almost everyone will listen to the radio in the car. If only to catch up on the news. And all the people who do listen to Spotify, Pandora, etc. do too.


    J Red Wednesday, June 13, 2012

    This also leaves out sports radio.  I haven't tuned in to music radio since the brutal departure of KUSF, however I will still try to listen to Giants games if I happen to be driving while they are on.  The number sounds significant, but the message here is a little skewed by the  aformentioned reasons to listen to broadcast radio.

     

    - J Red


    R.P. Wednesday, June 13, 2012

    I don't care what anyone says, unless they go out there and ask every single person in the U.S. if they listen to radio, they are full of shit.  93% of all statistics are made up... How's that one?

    I asked 35 people in my office if they listen to the radio:

    6 said only in the car when they drive to and from work, or are out on the weekends, and even then they are constantly shuffling between CD's, satellite, ipods/iphones/mp3 players, and back to terrestrial radio stations. A.D.H.D. much?

    3 others said they do at work through their laptops/computers but also shift between formats. 

    93%??? Fuck off...


    conrad Friday, June 15, 2012

    That's according to the latest stats shared by Arbitron, whose half-year report shows a substantial gain in listeners year-over-year.  The tally shows that roughly 93 percent of Americans over the age of 12 - ie, 242.1 million users - tune into traditional, broadcast radio at least once a week.  The broader US population is now pushing past 313 million, with a substantial chunk (ie, approximately 15 percent or so) under the age of 12.

    This is exactly what it sounds like: old-school, broadcast radio, not satellite, internet, or mobile-based streams.  Actually, we thought there was something wrong with that stats, but Arbitron confirmed that this indeed refers to traditional broadcasting.  "This data is for only over-the-air broadcasts," an Arbitron executive told to Digital Music News.    

    And they also told us that nearly 600,000 new listeners have joined since last year.  The 18-34 set was a strong contributor, though the overlapping 25-54 demographic displayed declines.  

    All of which seems to raise the question: why the near saturation, especially given all the complaints people have about this format?  This isn't the first report to show this extreme level of usage, despite lots of repetition, lots of breaks, and stunningly little format variety.  And, despite huge competition from satellite radio, Pandora, and non-radio formats like Spotify, all of whom are encroaching upon the dashboard.

    Perhaps out of all the possible explanations, convenience and ease-of-use is the strongest.  Radio is something you just turn on, it sits on your dashboard, and it doesn't require subscriptions, contracts, or apps.  On top of that, there's a common listening experience that remains completely unmatched by Pandora, Sirius, Songza, or even Turntable.fm.  Because no matter how schlocky and repetitive, there are probably millions dialed into the same call letters at any given moment.

    There's comfort in that.


    @somevelvetblog Wednesday, June 13, 2012

    ...and radio still rules


    @arrakiv Wednesday, June 13, 2012

    Okay, I'm not surprised a lot of people do, but *93%* of the US tunes into broadcast radio at least once a week?


    Topher Wednesday, June 13, 2012

    Without the radio how would I know what jams are gonna be hot at da club?

    But seriously, the radio plays crappy tunes but since *most* people can't tell the difference, and since it is easily accessible, it still rules. 

     

     


    wordbabey Wednesday, June 13, 2012

    I love my Spotify, Pandora, mp3 player/smartphone, etc. etc., but I still drive everyday, and still listen to music everyday on radiostations that are not repetitive and are still exciting.  of course, being in the tri-state area, and spending a lot of time in Los Angeles as well, there are a crap-load of publically supported and college radio stations, and good regional stations, that continue to broadcast cutting edge stuff every day.  especially in the late night to early mornings.

    sure i have to listen to a pledge drive every now and then, but i still find new music everyday on broadcast radio, and then find even more online.  I'm just not sure why everyone hates broadcast radio so much.  Even pop stations, like broken clocks, get it right once a day ;)  For me, I just listen to music wherever I can get it.  Why give up on broadcast as just another tool?  It's the music that's important, not the delivery device.  I'll be using as many as I can until the signals go dark.

    word


    Chopped AND Screwed Wednesday, June 13, 2012

    You know what's wrong with you people? You love music.

    Now listen to my rant about the movie theatre and you'll see what I mean.  

    1. They always play the same movies

    2. They're are only 6 movies at a time

    3. It's always the biggest movies with Brad Pitt, George Clooney, Salma Hayak and Lindsay Lohan.

    4. They never play my IFC favorites

    5. It's always the same popcorn - where's the gourmet organic peppery variety ?

    6. They play the same previews all the time for one of the other six movies

    7. I can't time-shift the movies to watch in my iPad 3 while I'm hang-gliding on my way to WWDC

    8. They don't have any of my obscure favorite foreign films from Argentina

    9. Everything is lowest common denominator

    10. It's $12 for a ticket.

    Shall I go on?

     

     


    not a ranter Tuesday, July 31, 2012

    Right on! LOVE the analogy to theaters.

    Seems like the comments here are over 93% haters or looking for something to hate for no apparant reason.

    All the article says is that 93% of people over the age of 12 "tune in at least once a week." It's not about music radio, it's about traditional FM and AM radio stations whose formats range from news, talk, sports, NPR to Pop, rock, country, oldies, alternative, etc.


    Visitor Wednesday, June 13, 2012

    sounds better too.


    DogDeer Thursday, June 14, 2012

    Keep in mind that many Arbitron markets now use the Portable People Meter to measure radio listening. This means that any station that broadcasts a signal that's within earshot of the PPM device shows up in the ratings. It also means that the survey participant doesn't necessarily have to be listening to the station in order for him or her to be claimed as a listener. Also, the overall percentage of radio listeners hasn't really moved up or down over the years. Much of the 600,000 new listeners that tuned in last year were "churn," meaning they are people who moved up into the measureable demographic (people 12+). As older people move out of measurement (typically by dying), more people enter it, typically because the birth rate is greater than the death rate. Therefore 600,000 new listeners can be added each year, without the percentage of listenership growing. Statistics can be molded in wonderful ways.


    Radio Guy Thursday, June 14, 2012

    anyone care what a radio guy with over 30 years of experience has to say?  


    Radio is still #1.  I've had people tell me to my face they never listen to radio - but then I get in their car and find out that's all they have to listen to ... except a tape or cd player.

    When people say they don't LISTEN they tend to mean in an active manner - KNOWING they're listening - with purpose, like "listening to an album."

    People tend to use radio passively - unless for the purpose of getting traffic, news, wx, and/or sports ...

    PPM measures what frequency a station is tuned to - regardless of any other factors.

     


    @vinyljunkies666 Thursday, June 14, 2012

    93 Percent of Americans Still Listen to Broadcast Radio

    Despite 91% thinking that it sucks ass..


    S249436 Monday, June 18, 2012

    The reality is that the 93% of American's often get drown out by the 7% of the population that is tech savvy or feels the need to belittle the masses in an effort to make themselves feel important.  Quite simply, they are the minority and will continue as such for the foreseen future.  Physical sales still dominate in many genres of music despite the media and the 7% of early adopters that seem to think the world is digital.  You can't get around the fact that technology will eventually have a wider adoption and mobile would seem to be the catalyst that will push this number higher.  Look around there are still a ton of cars on the road and stereos in the home with CD players and FM tuners.  It's easy, it's reliable and it just works with little effort.  Never underestimate the LCD (Least Common Denominator).  The 7% of the population with enough time to figure it out in addition to use it as their only source and then blog or post on social networks go on to be taught by the 93% to work for the 93% and eventually realize they don't have all the free time they once did to waste time on technology.  The 93% of America that is ok with someone else picking the music is the bread and butter that are making the country run.  They also are earning the income to buy it vs. steal it.  They are the customers to the Music Industry vs. the consumers that simply use it.  We make music for customers!  The consumers are merely a very loud, miserable group that serves no other purpose then a huge distraction. Physical sales and terrestrial radio are still very much alive and thriving!  

     


    not a ranter Tuesday, July 31, 2012

    Amen and thank you for an intelligent and factual opinion.


    Love all music Tuesday, July 31, 2012

    I couldn't agree more. the 7% are the lame negative people who seek out any kind of good news to poo poo on. They on only happy if they are putting someone down. I too listen to my ipod, mobile apps, etc. BUT there is nothing like hearing what is going on in my community. Information that I can get up to the minute and in a personal manner from my local DJs.


    mike j Wednesday, August 01, 2012

    i find it amusing that all my friends say they dont listen to radio. but always find them talking about an event or product they heard about on the radio. oh and by the way. most of my friends are tech saavy ipod owning sirius subscribing android hacking geeks. i myself have done the ipod thing. had cds. listened to pandora. but n this time in america where life is so fast. i need to get in the car and go! i have no time to make a play list on my ipod or hook up my phone for pandora. thank god for the radio.


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