The Future of Radio


Of course, I don’t know the future of radio… but when asked today I realized I had a few thoughts to share.

1.  The Internet may rule – I imagine that the internet will eventually find it’s way into all of the places where we currently favor terrestrial radio (namely the car being the last hold out).  Once that happens terrestrial radio will face some significant competition, most likely threatening its survival.

2.  Community advantage – The advantage that terrestrial radio has is that it is community-based.  As you may have picked up from previous blog posts, I’m a big fan of strengthening community simply by reaching out and getting involved with what’s going on around you.  Local radio stations can speak to communities in much the same way that local friends can.  They share your home town, they know the nuances and the secrets for the community, they can talk about news pertinent to your town, and be a real contributor to the local experience by playing music for that place.  Think of local radio like the local farmers.  Think of how much you appreciate the local farmer at the farmer’s market vs. the big factory farm.

I grew up outside of Philadelphia in the 80s/90s and the classic rock stations were my favorite.  Those stations and most specifically, the DJs of those stations, were local heros… and famous to me.  There was John Debella on one station and Pierre Robert on another.  I’m not sure it will be like that again, but in Charlottesville we have several stations that are very active in the community and they matter.

3.  Radio as filter – In the case of a DJ in a local community you trust them to “show” you new music.  By listening to them you are implicitly giving them control to introduce you to new music.  The DJ or station become a filter for you.  This is still an important role.

4.  User control – In some cases though, you will find times when you don’t want someone to show you something new.  You want control over your listening experience.  In that case you’ll choose to plug in your iPod and listen to your music.

5.  Reach or Accessibility – There are some places where terrestrial radio just doesn’t reach, or more importantly if it does reach there the options may be limited.  In small town America this can be the case.  I recall going to a hunting cabin in the back woods of Pennsylvania when I was a kid.  There may have been one radio station.  Last year I was on the big island of Hawaii and radio options were limited.  Guess what?  The house had a WiFi connection.  I pulled up Pandora on my iPod and chose what station I wanted to listen to.  It was a defining moment for me in thinking that radio as we know it may be going away.

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Maybe the future of radio is that we’ll have the best of all worlds – community-based internet radio stations, accessible everywhere through WiFi, and free to program any music they wish, thus acting as a true filter for its listeners.

Thoughts?

4 Responses to “The Future of Radio”

  1. Jose Says:

    Hi there,

    Friendly and familiar voices that you can listen to with your eyes closed, and you slowly get to understand, are probably some of our first experiences in life.

    Radio gives you more of that warm and accompaning feeling that any other media and therefore is here to stay. And if local so much better….

  2. Josh Says:

    Hey Ben/Artistfarm,
    Enjoyed the post but I believe that the radio has already killed itself.
    In my opinion (and it seems yours) the only things that radio had going for it are already gone. Radio is no more local than anything on TV these days, its all syndicated shows now and with heavy playlisting a DJ can no longer be trusted. Sure community radio may still exist but its rendered useless if they play trash (Over and over and over and over and over again).There is the odd independent station that does a good job but amoungst the million and one stations you have in the states I’m sure its quite hard to find them (Clear Channel, not sure of the name, own most of the “various” starions there no?).

    On my end of things I’ve lost faith in the medium of radio entirely… on the other hand I have nowhere to turn. Spotify “the wonder soloution” in the UK is useless being just back catalogue controlled by the major labels (which I would assume the same for Pandora).

    If you know of the Long Tail Theory then you have probably realised that nearly everythings available these days, several reportings claim it to prove it wrong but lack the evidance. Finding music is the real problem were facing today and hopefully somebody will have viable a soloution soon…

    Heres a great article I found a while back:
    http://musicmachinery.com/2009/03/26/help-my-ipod-thinks-im-emo-part-1/

    As far as I’m concerned a pairing of machine learning and social recommendation, somewhat like and advanced stumbleupon is the future of radio (being that neither can be entirely trusted on their own).

  3. Ben Coe Says:

    Jose~ I still enjoy a good solid filter – a voice I can trust to recommend products to me. So yes, I can believe this would come through in radio still.

    Josh~ That was a great article, thank you.

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