Ground zero for its ad efforts is New York, home to the company's largest sales force. A new two-floor, 50,000-square-foot office in midtown holds nearly 200 employees, many of them radio-sales refugees from Clear Channel and CBS Radio. That's up from 95 a year ago, and could grow to 350 by next year. Their target: terrestrial radio's $17 billion in annual ad revenue--in particular the $14 billion that comes from local advertisers.
"Half of the salespeople here are laser-focused on broadcast radio," said John Trimble, Pandora's New York-based chief revenue officer.
A lot is riding on their success. It took 14 years for the company to eke out its first profitable quarter: net income of $9 million on revenue of $200 million at the end of 2013. Still, it lost $41 million last year, despite a 56% growth in revenue, to $638 million.
John Trimble |
Pandora also sells local advertisers on its ability to target users by age, gender and ZIP code. And its overall reach is huge. The service has 75 million active listeners, a 9% share of total U.S. radio listening and a growing presence on car dashboards.
"Pandora has eaten into the overall radio budget," said Kim Vasey, director of radio for media-buying giant GroupM. "They are making a dent in the space."
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