Today I was hit by a market shift that left me baffled as to what I should do next.
Everybody, every work team, every company has Lock-ins. Lock-ins help you operate quickly and efficiently. And they blind you to potential market shifts. I have as many Lock-ins as anyone. Some I recognize, and some I don't. It's always the ones we don't recognize that leave us in trouble.
For 18 years I've listened to only one radio station in Chicago. WNUA 95.5 smooth jazz. I like jazz, and I've just about quit listening to anything else musically. I grew accustomed to the people who played the "light jazz" music on WNUA, and so enjoyed it I even listened to the station on my computer when traveling out of town. I was a stalwart, loyal fan. My whole family knew that when I was driving the car, the channel would be 95.5.
Then, after a long weekend out of town, I got in the car this morning. I pushed the button for 95.5, and for some reason there was Hispanic music. I couldn't figure it out. This didn't make any sense. So I turned off the radio and went about my business. When I returned home I logged onto WNUA.com to find a letter from a Clear Channel Chicago executive telling me that WNUA was no longer broadcasting as of 10:00am on Friday, May 22. The web site was gone, only this one HTML page existed. I was stunned.
I quickly did a Google search and found an article published by the media critic at The Chicago Tribune dated May 22, "WNUA Swings to Spanish Format." I immediately thought "this can't be right. There has to be something I can do to get back my radio station. Maybe if I email Clear Channel?" See, I quickly wanted to defend my radio selection, and extend the life of the product I personally enjoyed.
But then I read the article. Turns out there are a lot of smooth jazz lovers who were loyal to WNUA. But, unfortunately, that number has not been growing for a while. The channel management had tried many things to boost listeners, but none had worked. The market just wouldn't grow, despite their efforts. The jazz radio listener market had stalled – and was showing signs of (oh my gosh) decline! I was getting older, and apparently us old Chicago smooth jazz hounds aren't creating new jazz followers.
But, the station had done a lot of analysis as to what was growing. Hispanics now outnumber African-Americans as the largest minority group in the country. Clear Channel Chicago did a full scenario about the future, thinking about what would be needed to fill the needs of Chicago's biggest listener groups in 5 years. Looking forward, there was no doubt that smooth jazz wasn't going to grow – but the opportunity for an Hispanic station was "crystal clear". Competitively, they would continue losing revenue playing smooth jazz, and although the cost of shifting would be great – the opportunity to be part of a growing market had much more to gain. Chicago is the 5th largest Hispanic population in the USA and growing, with 28% of the current population Hispanic. Clear Channel management did both scenario planning and competitor analysis before deciding to make this switch – just what a Phoenix Principle company is supposed to do!
KaBoom. The market was shifting, and I saw it, but I didn't think about the impact on my own life. I just assumed WNUA would always be there playing jazz for me. But the people at Clear Channel looked at the market shifts, and how they could best use their 5 stations to service the most people. That is good for Chicago, and good business for Clear Channel. If they wanted to keep growing, WNUA had to be replaced. I would bet the hate mail has been extreme. The longing for our old station must be felt by several thousand people around Chicago. It's hard to let go of a Lock-in.
Oh, I feel terrible about not having my radio station. But the right move was made. I should have thought about this more, and seen it coming. I could have scouted out other radio stations, and started looking for other music styles that I'd like to listen to. But I wore blinders – until the market shifted and left me in the cold.
I'm curious, have any of you readers found yourself the unfortunate loser due to a market shift? Did some favorite aspect of your life or work disappear because the market went a different direction – and you found yourself in a small segment unprofitable to serve? I'd love to hear more stories from folks whose Lock-in left them unprepared for a change in lifestyle or work.
As for me, I guess there's always CDs. Or NPR (I'm getting old enough to like the news). But those would be D&E behaviors intended to ignore the shifting market. So, maybe I should start letting others in my family select the radio stations so I could climb out of my cave and learn what more modern musicians are doing these days. It would do me good to update my music knowledge – get me closer to people who have music appreciation beyond jazz, and probably make me a lot more likable as a driver. It's never too late to open up some White Space and learn what's new in the world you couldn't see because of your old Lock-in.