Tag: Win 94.6

  • Win 94.6 national sales head moves to MTV

    MUMBAI: Sanjay Hemady, national sales head for the Millennium Broadcast promoted Win 94.6 is moving to MTV India as group account director from 1 June.
    Hemady’s departure comes nearly a month after the private FM radio station suspended operations on 29 April, prefering to go off air than pay the crushing license fees.

    Hemady, who has been with the Gautam Radia founded Win since its inception two and a half years ago, will now be in charge of building the western region team at MTV India. Confirming the appointment, MTV ad sales team head Vineet Puri said the network was now actively looking at beefing up the Nick team, as well as scouting for an ad sales head for the kids’ channel, that is being revamped.

    Hemady, who started his career in media with the Indian Express in 1992, moved to Mid-day where he launched the ‘Professional Focus’ supplement, before moving to INMumbai and then BBC World. Hemady says he hopes to capitalise on the enriching Win experience in his new portfolio at MTV.

    Win 94.6 has already witnessed the departure of prominent RJs Roshan Abbas, who moved to Radio City two weeks ago and Anurag Pandey who has joined RED FM in Mumbai. Several key programming and ad sales executives are also moving to other pastures, it is learnt, with Win’s immediate future in limbo.

  • Win 94.6 radio station goes off air

    MUMBAI/NEW DELHI: Win 94.6, one of the private FM radio stations in Mumbai billed as the underdog among the five contenders, has gone off air from 1 pm today
    The move comes in the wake of a dispute over the payment of licensing fees for the current year, say sources. Officials at Millennium Broadcast, the promoter of the radio station, however, were loath to detailing the cause of the disruption of broadcast. “A combination of technical and legal issues, related to licensing have caused the problem,” was all they would say when contacted this afternoon. It would take at least two days to restore broadcast, officials said.
    When contacted, however, an information and broadcasting ministry official said they were not aware of any developments on the Win 94.6 front as of today.
    Win 94.6, which launched last April, lacked the backing of powerful media houses, something Radio Mirchi, Radio City and Go could boast of, but nevertheless caught the fancy of listeners in the city with its all-Hindi programming and late night shows that showcased old Hindi film music.

  • Most radio listeners still at home, says ORG Marg

    Most radio listeners still at home, says ORG Marg

    MUMBAI: Not in the car; and not in the local trains. Over 90 per cent of FM radio listeners are currently still at home.

    Most of the listeners are not high brow SEC A & B, but the great Indian lower middle classes
    That’s the finding ORG Marg has come up with, during its recently concluded radio audience measurement study, the first of its kind in the country. The study, done in Mumbai among 930 randomly selected 15 year old and above individuals, also established the fact that it is the SEC D and E listeners who are tuning in the most. Hip RJs with the cultivated accents may soon have to be on their way out.

    Not surprisingly, the channel that registered top of mind awareness was Vividh Bharati, the public broadcast channel that generations of Indians have grown up on. The fledgling private FM channels are but a blip on the screen for many listeners, although Radio Mirchi does manage to come in a poor third after Vividh Bharati and All India Radio’s FM1. AIR’s FM2 follows closely behind while Radio City, Win 94.6 and Go 92.6 don’t have much of audience attention. The newly launched Red FM, from the India Today stable, does not even figure in the stakes.

    Gender wise too, there is only a slight skew towards the male in the listenership, according to the study. 58 per cent of radio listeners in the city are male. A meager 12 per cent of these belong to the advertiser’s darling SEC A, while just 14 per cent to SEC B. A huge chunk of the listenership (45 per cent) comes from the SECs D and E, while 29 per cent belongs to SEC C.

    Analysis of radio channels by time slots shows that the morning peaks (7 am to 11.30 am) are higher than the evening peaks (7 pm to 11 pm). While most advertisers as well as private radio channels have been assuming that the average listener is the 18 to 34 year old executive driving to and from work in the metropolis, the truth may lie somewhere in between. ORG Marg executives believe that with the proliferation of miniature FM receivers, the listenership patterns in Mumbai could change drastically in the coming months, the results of the just concluded survey will enable radio players to know what to charge advertisers, and also tailor the content, says the research agency. Radio currently commands barely 1.5 per cent of the total ad pie in the country. While the radio scenario is still in a nebulous stage in India, a technical committee of all major broadcasters, ad agencies, ad houses, advertisers and media-buying houses headed by media research guru Praveen Tripathi has been convened to decide the best research method for Indian conditions.

    While there is no radio audience measurement system available in the country so far, the study was conducted via interviews using a structured questionnaire. While the diary method (requiring selected respondents to record their listenership in a pre-coded diary) was believed to be too tedious for the Indian scenario, ORG Marg relied on the recall method, where respondents were asked about yesterday listenership (listenership on the day previous to the interview). The agency also toyed with the idea of using wrist meters ( a method popular in Switzerland), which use microchips fitted in the meters to encode sounds and record listeners’ preferences.

  • Will 91 be Radio’s Star?

    Will 91 be Radio’s Star?

    91, as the hoardings strung out all over the city and suburbs tell us, hits the city airwaves on Tuesday.

    The fourth private FM player to enter the fray in Mumbai, Radio City, at a frequency of 91 MHz, is from the Star India stable. Headquartered at the Bandra Kurla Complex in the suburbs, its transmission towers are located in central Mumbai.

    Despite being a relatively late entrant, Radio City has the backing of the strong Star Group behind it and is expected to provide similar fare as the others so far (Radio Mirchi, Win 94.6 and Go 92.5), with a healthy mix of Hindi and English programming, a staple diet of hit music in both languages and some slick and smart deejaying.

    The channel is headed by chief operating officer, Radio Division, STAR India, Sumantra Dutta.