
March 25th 11, 08:52 PM
posted to ba.broadcast,rec.radio.shortwave,alt.radio.digital
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Mar 2010
Posts: 665
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Harker Research: HD Radio headed for oblivion - LMFAO!!!
On 3/25/11 08:58 , SMSbuster wrote:
March 24, 2011
Has HD Radio Reached a Tipping Point?
From time to time we hear word that HD Radio is near a tipping point,
a point where awareness and interest in HD Radio reaches critical mass
and the medium takes off.
If Google is any indication, HD Radio has already reached a tipping
point, a tip not toward success, but instead toward oblivion.
Google Insights is a tool to track interest in a topic or product
using search activity as the metric. Type in Charlie Sheen, and you’ll
find that interest in Sheen started taking off on February 25th, and
exploded on March 2nd. Aside from a secondary peak on March 8th,
interest has steadily declined since.
The chart above shows interest in Pandora radio. Pandora is an
interesting study because despite continued growth over the last few
years, interest actually peaked in early 2009. Since then, interest
has fallen off 50%.
With registered users topping 80 million, maybe everyone knows about
Pandora by now and there’s no need to search for it.
HD Radio is in a very different place. With limited awareness of HD
and very slow set sales, HD needs to be in a growth mode when it comes
to search.
If we saw growing numbers of listeners using Google to learn more
about HD Radio, it might mean HD Radio is gaining momentum, and it is
just a matter of time before people start buying HD radios.
Unfortunately, interest in HD is declining, not growing. Interest
peaked in December 2007, and has been steadily declining since. Each
December there is a seasonal peak, as there is for most tech gifts,
but interest in each subsequent Christmas season has dropped.
Interest in HD has fallen by two-thirds since its 2007 peak.
Graphing Pandora and HD Radio against one another shows the dramatic
difference between the two service’s arc of interest. The tipping
point for HD Radio actually occurred in 2007. It was the year that
interest in Pandora exceeded interest in HD, and since then HD
interest has steadily eroded.
While search interest is just one metric, declining interest is one
more negative sign of HD Radio's struggle to gain traction.
As an aside, HD channels are showing some signs of life in Arbitron,
apparently fueled by 250 watt FM translator simulcasts. Maybe AM
broadcasters should lobby for commercial low power FM allocations
rather than more HD power!
http://harkerresearch.typepad.com/ra...ing-point.html
The ****ers stole the idea of running Google Trends graphs! But,
that's ok because HD Radio is headed towards oblivion! LMFAO!!!
Makes you wonder how long it will be before the SEC realizes that
the only thing iBiquity was really selling was stock.
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