Le fosche previsioni di Palmer

Palmer parte dall’assunto che nessuno, oggi, entra più in negozio per comprare una radio. La radio è dappertutto, negli orologi, nei telefoni, nei lettori Mp3


da Radio Passioni

Sarà perché è un esperto di televisione, ma questa sentenza di condanna (a morte) della radio firmata sull’Huffington Post da Shelly Palmer non mi suona del tutto convincente. Palmer parte dall’assunto che nessuno, oggi, entra più in negozio per comprare una radio. La radio è dappertutto, negli orologi, nei telefoni, nei lettori Mp3. La radio non ha più l’esclusiva della diffusione delle notizie, perché ci sono molte, troppe alternative. Quando le auto saranno tutte equipaggiate con Internet wireless, la radio AM/FM morirà, cesserà di essere rilevante.
Non contano niente i modelli e i costi di distribuzione e ricezione dei contenuti, modelli che ci dicono che il broadcast continua ad avere senso rispeto all’unicast e al multicast. Non contano niente i contenuti specialistici, in particolare quelli locali, comunitari. Non contano niente i mille servizi utili (addirittura fondamentali, come nelle emergenze) che la radio, dentro e fuori l’automobile, riesce a fornire a milioni di persone a costi/contatto ridicoli e attraverso dispositivi facili da costruire, economici, facili da usare e capaci di funzionare per giorni con una piccola batteria. Cosa crede il signor Palmer, che Adsl, fibre e wireless Internet valgano una sega, che portarli in casa o nelle auto delle persone sia un’operazione a costo zero? Che siano già a disposizione di sei miliardi di individui in tutto il mondo? Forse una visione del mondo un po’ meno newyorkese gioverebbe alle analisi. Ma trovo strano che anche a New York non conti niente la fetta della torta pubblicitaria radiofonica tipica dei mercati maturi (torta che, guarda un po’ la combinazione, Mr. Palmer, ha fatto venire l’acquolina in bocca a Google, vada a leggersi qualcosa su Adsense e la radio). L’equazione – ultra semplificata, a prova di idiota – è che la radio è una commodity, che le notizie della radio sono una commodity (certo, se ascolto i “notiziari” dei network italiani; le notizie di Radio Popolare non sono commodity, ma merce pregiata), che l’ascolto avviene soprattutto in auto e che quando le auto saranno tutte “connesse” (già, quando?) la radio sparirà dalla faccia del mercato.
E’ interessante andarsi a leggere i commenti all’editoriale di Palmer, seguendo il link originale all’Huffington Post. Forse un po’ meno andarsi a leggere il blog dell’autore ma, de gustibus…

When Will Radio Die?
Shelly Palmer
July 13, 2007

(http://www.huffingtonpost.com/shelly-palmer/when-will-radio-die_b_56165.html)
When was the last time you went into a Best Buy and asked to see their Radio Department? That brilliant, but rhetorical, question was posed by Larry Rosin, co-founder and president of Edison Media Research at a Bill Sobel breakfast entitled, “The Future of Radio: 2007 and Beyond.”

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Larry was responding to a question about HD Radio adoption and his point was that nobody is going to care about it until the technology is incorporated into every radio you buy. Today, you would be hard pressed to find an FM-only radio. Almost every radio you come across is both AM and FM. He was making the assumption that, sometime in the future, every radio will be AM/FM/HD/XM/Sirius. (Like TV monitors that now play all popular formats.)
Of course, to his point, you don’t really buy radios nowadays. You buy clocks with radios in them, cars with radios in them even CD players with radios in them, but very few people walk into electronics stores and ask to buy a good, old-fashioned, radio.
Where and how we consume radio content is well researched and I won’t bother you with meaningless statistics. Suffice it to say that a well-run radio station is still a very cash flow positive business and I don’t know any poor radio broadcasters. This will probably be true as long as they keep putting AM/FM radios in cars and as long as people have to drive to and from work.
However, the radio business is changing fast. And, since the evolving financial structure of the radio business has often foreshadowed similar evolution in the television business, I thought it might be fun to look at some of the challenges that the radio business is facing.
First, it’s important to keep in mind that no one listens to only one thing. Everyone likes a bunch of stuff and that includes local, regional, national and global content. To say that local radio’s power is the fact that it is “local” is a circular argument that leads nowhere.
Local content is only valuable if it is not commoditized. For example: time, temperature and traffic information can be had from several sources in every major market. And, in a very short period of time, every car owned by a commuter with a GPS system will either subscribe to some form of integrated real time traffic information or get it free with their system. The cost of the real time traffic service used by BMW navigation systems is built into the cost of the car. They use a version with FM data transmitted by Clear Channel’s Total Traffic Network. BMW calls it RTTI (Real Time Traffic Information). It’s unbranded raw information that the car synthesizes into useful knowledge about how to get you where you are going with the least amount of traffic. This is only one of dozens of different technologies that you could use to get real time information into your car, others include: CDMA, GPRS, ATSC, WiFi, WiMax, Satellite, etc. The list is not endless, but it is long. And with the plethora of new wireless networks being planned, it will not be long before the technology of radio is seriously under siege.
Most cars have clocks and thermometers so time and temperature are commodity items. And traffic information will soon be as well. What local content is not commoditized? Sports scores? Local news? There are lots of places to get all of that information wirelessly other than the radio. I subscribe to several text alerts for emergent news and information as well as for real-time scores for the teams I follow. For the most part, the services are free. Free is not a good commercial business model. Ad-supported must accompany free-to-consumers — it’s a formula radio knows only too well.
How about music? Well, since local radio can’t customize playlists for each listener, the music they offer is only value-added if it is programmed in a unique way with excellent creative and production elements surrounding it. This is the art of all radio and when you hear it, it makes you smile. Sadly, creating this kind of experience is very expensive and not many local radio stations are up to the task.
So where does this leave the radio business for 2007 and beyond? The challenge is “transition” and it is the same challenge facing the television business. Consumers don’t really care if they get their traffic information via radio signals, wireless data, digital audio, smoke signals or carrier pigeon. They just want to know the best way to drive home. And people don’t care, and don’t really care to know, how they receive their content. Ask someone (a consumer, not someone in the media business) how a television works and how it is different from an IPTV system or a QAM-based cable system — you’ll receive a blank stare as an answer.
This is the strength of radio for the near-term future, simplicity, ubiquity and inertia. Cars come with radios, so do clocks. When cars start coming with wireless Internet connectivity and when enough people own them, radio as we know it — the propagation of RF signals in the AM and FM bands — will die. What will replace it? Nothing. Consumers will have alternative means of consuming the very same content on, what they perceive to be, very similar devices.
And, how will big media deal with the transition? This is where the radio business may be most illustrative of the future of the media business. If big radio figures out how to stay profitable, big TV will certainly follow. It’s way too early to eulogize radio, but the technology is older than it looks.

Shelly Palmer is Managing Director of Advanced Media Ventures Group LLC and the author of Television Disrupted: The Transition from Network to Networked TV (2006, Focal Press). Shelly is also President of the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences, NY (the organization that bestows the coveted Emmy® Awards). He is the Vice-Chairman of the National Academy of Media Arts & Sciences an organization dedicated to education and leadership in the areas of technology, media and entertainment. Palmer also oversees the Advanced Media Technology Emmy® Awards which honors outstanding achievements in the science and technology of advanced media. You can read Shelly’s blog.

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