The new system is a significant improvement.
The new system still has some significant problems.
In September 2009, Arbitron threw away the old “diary”
method in St. Louis and switched to the higher-tech “PPM” (short for portable
people meter), a device the size of a small pager that reads embedded
electronic codes that are unique to each radio station.
Several local programmers and a Colorado-based consultant
agree that the new method is better.
Kent Sterling, program director of WXOS-FM 101 ESPN sports
talk radio, said diaries gave a big advantage to “heritage” stations —
established stations whose reputations carried enough weight to make
diary-keepers write down their call letters when they could not recall to what
station they had actually listened.
In St. Louis, KMOX was that monster on AM, and KSHE fit the
bill on FM. The newer ratings still show both stations having strong
followings, but clearly not the stranglehold they once possessed.
“So with the PPM, you get a more accurate picture of who is
actually listening to what,” Sterling said.
Lauren Ryan, who heads programming for “The Big 550” KTRS,
an AM news talk station, said heritage stations — such as her main AM
competitor, KMOX — “got credited with more listeners than they actually had.”
One example of how PPM has changed perceptions of local
radio involves talk station, KFTK NewsTalk 97.1. According to November
Arbitron numbers, it is the highest-ranked news talk station in the 18-64 age
group, even higher than KMOX.
Arbitron does not disclose the names of PPM wearers, present
or past. The wearers also sign contracts that requires them to not talk about
their experience. The wearers are paid an amount Arbitron does not disclose.
So if the new PPM method is more accurate and less
susceptible to abuse and operator error, then what’s not to like about it?
Ask the same consultant and programmers and you quickly get
this answer: “The sample size is too small.”
With such a small sample, a station may get most of its
rating strength from a core of “heavy-deep” listeners, those who tune in
exclusively to one station for large portions of a day, Balis said.
“You have one or two of them go on vacation for a week, and
your numbers can really change,” Balis said. “With the PPM, you get a lot more
of a roller coaster effect.”
Even with the reservations, Ryan judges the new system to be
ultimately fair. “We radio stations can complain all we want, but we all play
by the same rules,” she said.
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