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#1
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Hello all,
I am new to the group but have a specific reason for joining. The primary reason I joined, like many of you I am sure, is to get information about short wave radio. My situation: I have the appropriate parcel of land (110) acres that is free from any legal impediments to building a short wave radio tower. The land is located in West Central Alabama, in rural Fayette County.I also have the necessary funding to build a short wave radio tower and transmitter. The site has been evaluated as a perfect location that is virtually free from any potential liability and from the perspective of reaching millions of people in Mexico and Central America. Questions for the group: 1. What are the potential financial rewards for owning and operating a short wave radio transmitter/tower? 2. How does an owner go about establishing a revenue stream from potential purchasers of air time. 3. Who would the primary customer base be? Comments or suggestions? Thank you, DrJoe (newbie) |
#2
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On 30 Mar 2006 09:43:54 -0800, "DrJoe" wrote:
Questions for the group: 1. What are the potential financial rewards for owning and operating a short wave radio transmitter/tower? Absolute dollars, pretty good. ROI, pretty bad. For starters, you're looking at high 6 to 7 figure investment just in plant. Then there are enough regulations to get you in trouble than you can handle without a DC law firm - which is why there are so many large law firms in DC that do nothing but broadcast work. What do you know about running a broadcast station? Are you licensed or do you have to pay someone who has one? Can you run a board, do production, remotes? Or will you have to pay people who can? That's on the technical side, and technical employees are cheap. You want listeners, you need recognizable talent - and they don't work for minimum wage. Unions, anyone? Oh, if you play music, there's AFTRA. And you'd better have a good maintenance budget, an unlimited supply of funds to replace equipment that goes bad or terrific luck. When something burns out, you can't go off the air for a few days until you can get a new part - you'd better have the spares on hand, and have someone who can swap them out in minutes - 24/7/365. Yes, that means that you pay standby (around 50%) to an engineer, just to be available if you call him. Getting a bit discouraged yet? I haven't gotten through with even 25% of the negatives. The positives are like what you tell the kid shooting hoops on the corner - IF you make it to the pros, and IF you don't shoot your knees, and IF you last a few years, and IF you're really smart, you just might make some decent money. Then SuperHurricane comes along and you're a million and a half in the hole. 2. How does an owner go about establishing a revenue stream from potential purchasers of air time. Advertising. Since it's done mainly by contacts, if you don't have any, you don't have any. And you can't buy 10 years of having been in the business, building a network, without spending 10 years doing it. 3. Who would the primary customer base be? Anyone who wants to advertise to your listener base. Comments or suggestions? Raise sheep - you'll make more money, sleep better and live longer. Or build a campground. A few thousand bucks, most of it underground and safe, and you're in business. |
#3
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He could do all three, build the shortwave station, raise sheep and
operate a campground, covering all bases. Buy two transmitters for hot standby, don't have to pay an engineer for standby (although that sounds like a good gig for me! Will you pay my travel?). Hire interns from a local college to run the board and work as on-air talent. Maybe you can get a journalism professor to provide you students who will work cheaply? Al Klein wrote: On 30 Mar 2006 09:43:54 -0800, "DrJoe" wrote: Questions for the group: 1. What are the potential financial rewards for owning and operating a short wave radio transmitter/tower? Absolute dollars, pretty good. ROI, pretty bad. For starters, you're looking at high 6 to 7 figure investment just in plant. Then there are enough regulations to get you in trouble than you can handle without a DC law firm - which is why there are so many large law firms in DC that do nothing but broadcast work. What do you know about running a broadcast station? Are you licensed or do you have to pay someone who has one? Can you run a board, do production, remotes? Or will you have to pay people who can? That's on the technical side, and technical employees are cheap. You want listeners, you need recognizable talent - and they don't work for minimum wage. Unions, anyone? Oh, if you play music, there's AFTRA. And you'd better have a good maintenance budget, an unlimited supply of funds to replace equipment that goes bad or terrific luck. When something burns out, you can't go off the air for a few days until you can get a new part - you'd better have the spares on hand, and have someone who can swap them out in minutes - 24/7/365. Yes, that means that you pay standby (around 50%) to an engineer, just to be available if you call him. Getting a bit discouraged yet? I haven't gotten through with even 25% of the negatives. The positives are like what you tell the kid shooting hoops on the corner - IF you make it to the pros, and IF you don't shoot your knees, and IF you last a few years, and IF you're really smart, you just might make some decent money. Then SuperHurricane comes along and you're a million and a half in the hole. 2. How does an owner go about establishing a revenue stream from potential purchasers of air time. Advertising. Since it's done mainly by contacts, if you don't have any, you don't have any. And you can't buy 10 years of having been in the business, building a network, without spending 10 years doing it. 3. Who would the primary customer base be? Anyone who wants to advertise to your listener base. Comments or suggestions? Raise sheep - you'll make more money, sleep better and live longer. Or build a campground. A few thousand bucks, most of it underground and safe, and you're in business. -- Joe Leikhim K4SAT "The RFI-EMI-GUY"© "Treason doth never prosper: what's the reason? For if it prosper, none dare call it treason." "Follow The Money" ;-P |
#4
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In article ,
Al Klein wrote: Are you licensed or do you have to pay someone who has one? Al, son, there hasn't been a requirment, in the USofA, for an Operators License, in the Broacast Industry, for MANY years. (More than a Decade) Me One who has a 1st Phone and a 1st Graph tacked up as wallpaper...... |
#5
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On Fri, 31 Mar 2006 18:56:03 GMT, Me wrote:
In article , Al Klein wrote: Are you licensed or do you have to pay someone who has one? Al, son, there hasn't been a requirment, in the USofA, for an Operators License, in the Broacast Industry, for MANY years. (More than a Decade) Me One who has a 1st Phone and a 1st Graph tacked up as wallpaper...... Whoops. Tripped over my beard. ![]() |
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