Believe it or not we’re just a few weeks from radio stations flipping their programming upside down by playing some amount of Christmas music. The logical thinkers dip their proverbial toe into Christmas music like thoughtful grown-ups. Others jump in whole-heartedly like adolescents into a frigid lake.
Christmas music programming. Is it good or bad? Right or wrong? Harmony in the hallways?
Viewed simply as a programming TACTIC, programming all Christmas music is about as crazy as it gets. Your listeners come to you because you play the music they love – Chris Tomlin, Matthew West, and Hercules and the Chicken Fat People.
Now you’ve decided to stop playing all the music that they love. That’s like ESPN deciding to stop carrying sports. How is the name of Bill Gaither is THAT supposed to be a good idea?
However, viewed as a programming STRATEGY it’s a different thing altogether.
Our format’s biggest barrier for growth is new listeners don’t know the music. Since everyone’s favorite station is the station that plays their favorite music, it’s down right impossible for someone to become a fan of your station if they don’t know the music.
RISK impedes adoption.
RISK is something every business, every product, and every radio station must overcome in the Adoption process, as seen in the fancy graphic.
Consider this:
No one says McDonald’s has their favorite hamburger. And yet McDonald’s is the 6th most valuable brand in the world according to Forbes.
How’s that happen?
It’s not because they have the best burger, but because they flawlessly deliver a consistent experience whether in Dallas, Dublin, or Dubai. (And their bathrooms are clean, thankyouverymuch!)
In other words, McDonald’s has virtually eliminated RISK.
When done well Christmas music programming totally eliminates RISK for a new listener.
My talented friend Tom Fridley spent a season working in the post office where the dozens of employees went about their business of sorting the mail isolated in their cubicles listening on headphones to their individual pop, country, rock, or AC station. But something interesting happened when the Christmas music started. The headphones came off, and everyone in the office listened to one station – the station that played Christmas music.
“There was a time when our community was defined by our neighbors in a geographic sense. Today, our communities are based on shared interests, not shared sidewalks.”
Mark Ramsey
Christmas is the largest possible “shared interest” for our format, allowing our stations to become instantly familiar as we connect to Christmas memories, shopping, decorating the tree, the local parade, the neighborhoods with the best Christmas lights, the dynamics of family get togethers, and the church Christmas pageant.
Tactically, programming all Christmas music makes no sense at all.
Strategically, it may be your most important decision for long-term growth.