Tag: FM stations

  • Around Rs 12.5 cr spent on flagship promotional programmes till now for 2013-14

    Around Rs 12.5 cr spent on flagship promotional programmes till now for 2013-14

    NEW DELHI: The Information and Broadcasting Ministry has spent a sum of Rs 12.48 crore during 2013-14 so far on promotional shorts publicising the flagship programmes of the government.

     

    I&B Minister Manish Tewari said that a sum of Rs 103.203 crore had been spent on similar promotional shorts during 2012-13.

     

    The Minister was answering questions after unveiling a comprehensive multi-media initiative “Glimpses of the India Story” – Phase II intended to capture the journey of India’s development through various programmes and policies launched by the government during the last ten years. The first phase was unveiled in May and was actively run from 14 May to 4 June.

     

    The first phase of the ‘India Story’ informed the people about the initiatives taken by the government during the recent years and the tangible benefits that had accrued in sectors such as education, health, telecom, rural and urban infrastructure. In the second phase, a 360 degree communication model has been adopted across media platforms focusing on the new initiatives of the government and the upcoming reforms aimed at improving the lives of the common people.

     

    Giving figures, the Minister said the figure in 2007-08 was Rs 17.87 crore, Rs 46.92 crore in 2008-09, Rs 35.08 crore in 2009-10, Rs 48.48 crore in 2010-11, and Rs 87.78 crore in 2011-12.

     

    He said that the social media was also being used in a major way and ‘content agnostic platforms would be created’.

     

    He claimed that the second phase comprising around ten shorts was rights-based, and had also referred to certain rights that the government had planned for and which were pending in Parliament. The objective of the current phase of the India story is not only to communicate the benefits of the reforms, but to develop a sense of ownership for these initiatives among the people.

     

    The multimedia initiative would be put across on traditional, print, outdoor publicity, special outreach programmes focusing on new media platforms with the objective of informing and apprising the public of the new policy initiatives undertaken by the government recently. For the print and visual media, the content is being developed in 11 languages.

     

    The Ministry has adopted a 360 degree multi-media approach concentrating on six broad themes. Creatives have been developed highlighting the broad features of each of these initiatives. The print media initiative would be covering 539 newspapers across the country which would include regional papers, small and medium papers as well as the dominant groups at the national level.

     

    The outdoor publicity has been planned in 195 cities/towns with 750 sites. Besides this, 216 private FM Stations and prominent TV channels in the news and general entertainment segment would also be covering the Glimpses of India Story.

     

    In the second phase, the various shorts have used Priya as a key figure communicating the intent of the government, while some creatives on the Right to Information had used a look-alike of cartoonist R K Laxman’s ‘Commonn Man’.

     

    For the first time, a special video for the theme song “Meelon Hum Aa Gaye, Meelon Humien Jana Hai” has been developed. The video highlights the need to continue on the path ahead to ensure that the country has able to achieve high economic growth as well as social equity. A key highlight of the audio visual content will also be the special song on “National Integration” of two minute duration focusing on India’s innate strength in “Unity in Diversity”.

     

    The India Story during the second phase will also be positioned on the New media platforms. The focus of attention would be to reach out the younger audience who use this medium on a 24×7 basis. Within the ambit of social media, content would be loaded on YouTube, Twitter, Facebook and Blog. A dedicated portal highlighting the India story is being developed to provide content/updates on all relevant issues related to the dissemination and outreach programme.

     

    Rural communication would also be one of the corner stones of the current phase of the India Story. Press Information Bureau, through its Public Information Campaigns (PICs) would be taking the message of the new initiatives to the grass roots. PIB is planning 106 Public Information Campaigns (PICs) during the financial year 2013-14. For this initiative, PIB has designed specific content in the form of booklets covering the new initiatives of the government.

     

    The Song and Drama Division and Directorate of Field Publicity would be integrating their efforts for enhancing the outreach to the rural areas through PICs and vertical programmes across the country. The Song and Drama Division would be organizing five Jamunia Programmes concurrently with PICs and 144 other shows based on rural folk culture and theatrical formats within the next two months. Directorate of Field Publicity will be organizing programmes in 195 towns/cities within the next two months.

  • FM radio – Abuzz with activity

    The floodgates opened in 2007.

    The year gone by was a time when years of hard work and patience finally paid off for the radio industry in India. It was a year of intense competition, aggressive marketing and marginal creativity as private FM finally flowered in metros as well as tiny towns throughout the nation.

    Even though advertising crept up only slowly, and the government continued to pussyfoot around the issue of allowing news and current affairs on private radio, the mood stayed upbeat throughout the radio industry.
    With phase II of FM opening up the industry for private players, there was no holding back.

    Consider these figures. In 2006, 26 private FM stations were operationalised. In contrast, AIR saw ten FM stations operationalised in 2004 and an equal number in 2005, with just two in 2006.

    By October 2007, a total of 281 FM channels include 161 of All India Radio and 120 privately owned channels were operational.

    By the year end, there was a scramble among operators to put up stations in the 91 cities for which licenses had been doled out – held up in many places by the government’s delay in activating the transmission towers. It was no mean task. Entities like Big FM and Sun’s SFM have a quota of 45 stations each to put up, Mirchi has 32 and Bhaskar, the late entrant hurried to put up 17 stations on air. Most have reached their targets, some like BAG Films’ Dhamaal is yet to launch in four cities, and India Today’s Meow has five more cities in its kitty.

    But more than these numbers, it was programming and marketing of stations that were put up in a hurry that hogged the limelight. A trove of radio jockeys was unearthed from various corners of the country (some poached, a lot honed) to give that much needed edge to the programming, while contests and on ground events (particularly in the small towns) jostled for listener attention.

    The core content, despite the operators’ insistence to the contrary, stayed what the listener apparently wanted the most – Bollywood music.

    Music all the way
    They gave it their own tags – superhit music, hot adult contemporary music, latest hits – but the fact remained that recent Bollywood music played on most stations throughout the day, with experiments like western music and ‘old’ tracks relegated to the very early mornings or the very late nights.

    Very few, like Radio Indigo and Fever played differential western music and could attract only niche audiences, and fewer like Meow FM decided to take the ‘talk’ format and address the female audience directly. While Meow claimed that it had managed to hook the feminine ears in both Delhi and Kolkata, the other stations played safe and stuck to the ‘less talk, more music’ formula.

    The innovations came in other forms – Big FM devised a 100 chartbuster formula, to keep playing the ‘most wanted’ music all the time, while Radio One went for the 20 20 format to keep the elusive listener hooked to a show. “The 20 minute format works on the principle that if a listener is listening to an average time of 20 minutes, the programming mix is designed to achieve that,” officials averred, when the format launched in June.

    Radio City amplified its outlook with the Whatte Fun concept, that started with a music video and spun across programming to become a microsite of its own, which will probably have a larger life of its own in 2008. Big FM’s new digital division will be another entity to watch out for in 2008; launched in the last part of ’07, it began small with a podcast of its Bangalore station but promises a lot in the digital space.

    It was the myriad contests that remained the nectar to attract the bees, however. In the absence of a regular audience tracking methodology till October end, when TAM’s Radio Audience Measurement came into being, contests and big prizes stayed the carrots with which stations enticed listeners, who in the absence of differential programming, exhibited no real station loyalty.

    CSR also remained a strong buzz word on radio – from distributing raincoats to traffic police paying tribute to Kargil martyrs , aiding the flood hit in Rajkot to spreading AIDS awareness among truck drivers, the initiative also became a good on ground activity to popularise the stations.

    ‘Ad’ding up the revenues
    Overall radio advertising revenue, that was at Rs 3180 million in 2005, was expected to touch around Rs 6800 million this year, a figure that would still be around six per cent of the total ad pie.

    Advertisers are slowly but steadily beginning to view radio as a medium that can reach out to people, and need no more be a supporting medium. As industry veterans had predicted, the presence of more stations, drove listenership which fetched more ads too.

    Players like Big FM introduced uniform rate cards for advertisers in all its stations across India, to bring in rate transparency. Elsewhere, companies like MBPL offer sales support to Gwalior’s ‘Suno Lemon’, while a Radio Mirchi managed Radio Ghupshup’s national ad sales.

    Radio itself used other media aggressively to advertise itself, with radio stations’ advertising on TV tripling in one year.

    A measure of success
    After a long stint of the lone Indian Listenership Track of the MRUC that would release data in phases through the year, TAM finally brought out its data in the form of the Radio Audience Measurement by the end of October. While a majority of the stations contributed to the service, the initial findings released by RAM (operational only in Delhi, Mumbai and Bangalore with Kolkata on the cards) created a tizzy of sorts in the industry with stations staking claim to numero uno positions in either reach, listenership or in respective TGs. A few months down the line, the RAM data should help the industry find its feet, and tailor programming and marketing to suit the market it addresses.

    All India Radio
    The reign of the unchallenged state sponsored monarch was challenged in a big way in 2007, but some of the RAM figures indicate that AIR’s own FM, operational even in border areas where terrrestrial reach is a problem, continues to hold its own. AIR also continues to enjoy a monopoly on news and current affairs aes well as live cricket commentary, an area that gives it a huge edge over private FM competitors. The other player in the satellite space, Worldspace Radio, did not fare much better, despite innovations like a tie up with MSN India for streaming its content online.

    Community radio, 26 stations of which became operational this year, should become a force to reckon with this year. The government is also considering the proposed 5,000 licenses it plans to issue to be divided into sectors, such as farming community, fishing community, women and children and others, and issue the licenses accordingly.

    At present 26 stations, all by educational institutions are using community radio.

    Code of conduct
    While the I and B ministry said there would no separate regulatory authority for FM stations other than the Broadcast Regulatory Authority of India conceived in the proposed Broadcast Regulatory Services Bill, the Association of Radio Operators of India (AROI) formed an advisory committee for the creation of a self-regulatory Content Code for private FM radio broadcasting.

    The year wasn’t without its share of controversy. Uninhibited chatter by radio jockeys turned into a crisis of sorts when the north east erupted over a wayward comment on the Indian Idol winner. The case still hangs fire.

    Upward swing
    Needless to say, the sudden spurt of FM brought with it a fresh wave of young listeners, a wave aided in no small measure by the increasing reach of the mobile phone, which came loaded with the FM features. Over 85 per cent of radio listenership in metros by the end of the year happened on the move. The figures will only go up this year. Whether the curve is matched by an increased burst of creativity now remains to be seen.

  • BBC programming to be off FM stations in Moscow

    MUMBAI: BBC World Service has been informed by the owners of the Moscow FM radio station Bolshoye Radio that BBC programming in Russian will no longer be broadcast on the station.

    This was BBC Russian Service’s last FM distribution partner station in Russia. It follows two
    other FM partner stations ceasing to take BBC programmes over the last nine months.

    The owners of Bolshoye Radio, financial group Finam, have told representatives of the BBC Russian Service that they are required to remove BBC programming at the request of Russian licensing authorities, or risk the station being taken off-air.

    The UK pubcaster says that it understands that this will take effect in advance of its scheduled block of programmes this afternoon at 17:00 Moscow time (MT).

    The BBC intends to appeal to Russia’s Federal Service for the Supervision of Mass Media, Communication and Protection of Cultural Heritage. It will ask for the decision to be reviewed and for the original concept of the station to be respected.

    According to official warnings received by Finam from the regulatory body, the licence requires that all programming must be produced by Bolshoye Radio itself.

    However the BBC said that the detailed concept documents – the basis on which the licence was awarded in February 2006 – clearly state that only “60 per cent of the station’s total output will be original material produced by Bolshoye Radio.”

    The BBC also stated that according to the same concept documents, the station would also have up to 18 per cent foreign produced content. This percentage of foreign content is reflected in the station’s licence.

    The concept documents of the station include the BBC and Voice of Russia as content providers and as integral parts of the output – specifically in order to enable the station “to reflect many and often
    contradictory views on current affairs”.

    BBC Global News director Richard Sambrook said, “We are extremely disappointed that listeners to Bolshoye Radio in Moscow will be unable to listen to our impartial and independent news and information programming in the high quality audibility of FM.

    “The BBC has invested a great deal of energy and resources into developing high quality programming for the station. The BBC has similar broadcasting arrangements with partner stations around the world. Our services are available on FM in over 150 capital cities – some 75 per cent of the global total.

    “The BBC entered into the relationship with Bolshoye Radio in good faith, and the licence was won in a competitive tender in February 2006. We cannot understand how the licence is now interpreted in a way that does not reflect the original and thorough concept documents.

    “We are appealing to Russia’s Federal Service for the Supervision of Mass Media, Communication and
    Protection of Cultural Heritage. We will ask for the decision to be reviewed and for the original concept of the station to be respected.”

    The BBC and Voice of Russia have been on Bolshoye Radio since May this year. The station, which was sold in July to financial investment company Finam, was currently at a test signal stage ahead of an official launch planned for the autumn.

    The BBC has had previous problems with FM broadcasting in Russia. At the end of 2006, Moscow station Radio Arsenal ceased taking BBC programming, and in early 2006 the St Petersburg station Radio Leningrad also stopped taking BBC programmes. Radio Leningrad informed the BBC that it had been required to stop broadcasting BBC programmes by local licensing authorities.

    BBC Russian programmes continue to be audio streamed online at bbcrussian.com.