Country consultant Jaye Albright asks are we going to be
moving slowly downward 25-54 and 18-49 year after year between now and then, as
leading edge boomers age out of 25-54 and Gen X moves into the middle of it?
It's worth studying both Census Bureau population
projections as well as Nielsen's annual Radio Today historical trends to stay
ahead of the curve.
Fortunately, country still ranks #1 18-24. 25-34, 35-44 and
45-54 in 2013:
So, what's the big deal?
Jaye Albright |
According to Albright, to overcome the smaller proportion of 35-44 in both the
general population and country's audience comp, the format must increase it's
share of both Generation X and Generation Y listening above current levels.
The national country format average share 35-44 was up from
2011 to 2012 from a 12.2 to a 12.8, but then slipped to a 12.6 this year.
The majority of country stations tracked by Nielsen this
year cut a smaller slice of a shrinking pie.
Turning that slight dip around by the time the next annual
format report emerges in 2014 will lay the necessary groundwork for both a
solid medium- and long-term future.
Failing to do so will mean we'll need to wait for the
average age of 18-49 and 25-54 to come down, which census data forecasts won't
happen for a decade.
Getting it "right" between now and then requires
targeting more discretely than the standard ten year demo cells, growing new
coalitions based on more than the mix of age or gender that worked for the
format in the past.
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