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BY KURT HANSON
RAB Internet keynote speaker Charlie Warner, the former radio
exec and broadcast professor who is now AOL's VP/Interactive Marketing,
gave a luncheon speech to ab out
2,000 attendees yesterday that explained to the crowd, with the help
of a slide, how advertising works -- and suggested that radio's best
hope for embracing the Internet is to sign up for a partnership with
AOL's Digitial Cities program.
At
the end of his speech, when he offered to take a questions, he was
challenged Emmis Chairman Jeff Smulyan, who was sitting on
the dias with Warner.
"We gave our content to Broadcast.com and they got $5 billion
out of it," Smulyan said. "What do we get out of a partnership
with you -- does the economic benefit go to us or to you?"
"It's
not an exchange of money at this point," Warner replied. (I believe
that AOL relationships generally begin with the partner receiving
payments from AOL, or an even trade, but eventually evolve into the
partner paying large sums to AOL to continue the relationship.)
The exchange continued with Warner eventually concluding that Emmis
would not be participating in the Digital Cities venture and Smulyan
agreeing with that assessment.
The speech was not well-received by the audience -- so much so that
even RAB President/CEO Gary Fries was prompted to express an opinion
in a press conference later that afternoon that Warner had not properly
addressed the intended topic of his speech. "I
just think the message was wrong today," Fries said.

Chicago-based RadioWave has
become the first Internet firm to actually begin streaming
different radio spots to Internet listeners than those heard by over-the-air
listeners, the firm announced at the RAB in Denver yesterday.
At the same time, RadioWave also announced the signing of a 23-station
group deal with Susquehenna Radio. The deal represents RadioWave's
first major group-wide commitment and one of the industry's largest
such deals to date.
"Ad insertion" capability has been promoted for months now
as a possible key factor in making audio streaming profitable for
radio stations -- because it allows stations to charge a premium CPM
for its Internet listeners -- but RadioWave says it is the first firm
to actually launch the technology on a live radio station (WLAV/Grand
Rapids).
RadioWave's Director of Sales Jim Smith explained that the technology
can be used either to upsell local advertisers at a premium
price if they want their spots to run to be on the station's webcast,
or to cover other local spots with spots sold to national advertisers
who want to reach webcast listeners. The Internet-delivered spots
on
RadioWave's system can be
"rich media" spots that are accompanied by a visual for
the advertiser and even a link to the advertiser's site.
The Susquehanna group deal, which was apparently in negotiation for
months and signed yesterday, is an expansion of a two-station deal
between the two firms which included KSAN/San Francisco and
KKMR (Merge 93.3)/Dallas-Ft. Worth.
Susquehanna is the nation's largest privately-held radio group, with
stations in San Francisco
(including KFOG and KNBR), Dallas-Ft.Worth (including
KPLX), Houston, Atlanta (including 99X), Cincinnati,
Indianapolis, and elsewhere. (Click here
for a complete list of the Susquehanna properties, including links
to individual station sites.)
Guest
essay (excerpt):

BY BOB BELLIN
Last year I had high hopes for web radio and thought it was
an ideal application for the Internet. Now, I have a hard time believing
that another Internet-only radio provider would
make the world be a better place.
Why has excitement been replaced with indifference?
First, let me explain why I was once so enthused about the prospects
of Internet radio:
1)
Niche formats could flourish on a national platform. Lots of
people would go out of their way to listen to any number of music
genres that have a pretty good following but will never command
a large enough share to make financial sense for a broadcast station.
Electronica, House, Folk, Rap, Celtic, old Jazz are some formats
that might make sense as webcasts...
2)
The revenue model is already established. Lots of discussion
is taking place about the value of banner ads. Do they work? On
what basis? Do click-thru's matter? How much copy? Should they be
priced at the same CPM as TV, radio or print? Are three enough?
Are six too many? You get the idea -- none of this is clear yet.
On the other hand, sixty-second commercials are an uncontested,
accepted advertising format...
3)
30% of America can't tune in their favorite station clearly at work,
according to the Internet study Edison Research did for Arbitron...

I've
just made a compelling case (if I do say so myself) for Internet-based
radio. So what's the problem?
Pay
close attention because this concept is very subtle:
They
all suck!
Why?
Because none of the management of any of them knows anything about
programming music.
Read
Bob Bellin's full Guest Essay here.
I'm sure many
of RAIN's readers will disagree with Bellin's opinions and
I look forward to publishing opposing points of view. You can use
the RAIN feedback form here
or you can use your own e-mail software by clicking here.
At
the RAB's Marketing
Leadership Conference
in Denver, Arbitron
Internet Information Services
VP/GM Bill Rose and Edison
Media Research president Larry Rosin
presented
the fourth in their semi-annual series of research studies on radio
and the Internet.

The study is entitled "Dotcom $: Getting more Internet Advertising
on your station -- The buying Power of 'Streamies'" and
is based on a new national study of 2,000 diarykeepers.
As
noted here in RAIN yesterday (here),
the study suggests that listening to Internet radio, rather than
growing rapidly, has not increased at all during the past
six months.
However, the study has lots of useful findings for radio.
It documents the fact that dotcom advertisers may be making
a big mistake by ignoring midsize and smaller markets. It shows
that radio is the top companion to web usage (over CDs, phone calls,
and watching TV). It has useful findings on what consumers want
on a station's website.
The presentation (in the form of an Adobe Acrobat file) is now available
on the Arbitron website here.
More from RAIN on the study next week.
Part
Two:
Click
here for RAIN
News Archives
Looking
for Part One of the "RAIN Guide to Internet Audio?" Enter
the News Archives and go to any issue from the middle of last week
for the latest version.
And if you're
at the RAB today, I hope to see you there! --
KH
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