- 10/07/2008
- Posted by: Mike O'Malley
- Category: radio programming
I was recently re-reading Seth Godin’s “Meatball Sundae” and the story of 18th century potter Josiah Wedgwood. The business advice Godin suggested Wedgwood might have given to his less successful brother and fellow potter seemed so appropriate for radio that I couldn’t resist adapting a few:
• Create special, unique programming elements that are so compelling that people will seek them out and talk about them.
• Train your staff to perform in ways that are unique to your station.
• Have and live up to the highest quality standards in all you do.
• Since everything you do is top quality, prominently attach your name to your work.
• Display your product at every opportunity keeping both the display and product fresh.
• Regularly generate unique, premium content on a large scale.
• Program and market to heavy users while avoiding niche pressures.
Don’t these seven ideas form an appropriate check list for what PPM says are hallmarks of successful stations: compelling and timely content, repeatedly doing what works, and generating reasons for listeners to return often?