PODCAST · business
The Truth About Radio podcast with Dave Sturgeon
by DAVE STURGEON
Based on the book "The Truth About Radio: A Myth-Busting Guide for Today's Media Buyers and Sellers," the Truth About Radio podcast features short, weekly audio clips that set the record straight regarding radio myths circulating in an increasingly fragmented audio media universe.
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MYTH #31: Radio Reps Just Sell Spots
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Myth #30: Managing and Training are the Same Thing
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MYTH #29: You Can Fake it Till You Make it
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MYTH #28: Radio's Low CPM Must Mean Nobody's Listening
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Myth #27: Radio Isn't an Important Part of Your Integrated Marketing Plan
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Myth #26: Digital is Better for Awareness Because it's Trackable
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Myth #25: My Client Wants Precision Targeting. Radio's Too Broad
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Myth #24: Consumers Need to See Your Brand to Remember it
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Myth #23 Saving Money By Not Advertising Makes You Happy
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Myth #22 Radio Must Be Dying - Clients Aren't Buying
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Myth #21: Nobody Wants to Advertise Right Now
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WORLD RADIO DAY - 2026
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Myth #20: Radio Has Optimized it's Influencer Capabilities
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Myth #19: Live Radio Endorsements Hurt Programming
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Myth #18: Loyalty is Dead with Modern Audiences
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Myth #17: Influencer Marketing is Only Available on Social Media
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Myth #16: A Lead is a Lead
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Myth #15: Radio Can't Compete With Digital
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Myth #14: Part 2 of It's Either Radio OR Digital
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Chapter 4: It's Either Radio OR Digital
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Myth #13: My Business isn't Big Enough for Radio
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Myth #12: Radio Doesn't Work for Recruitment
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Myth #11: Radio Only Works for Certain Categories
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Myth #10: We Tried Radio. It Didn't Work.
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Myth #9: Radio Can't Target a Specific Audience
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Myth #8: Nobody Hears Radio Ads
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Myth #7: Radio Doesn't Come with a Dashboard
Send us Fan MailIf you’re advertising on broadcast radio, first off, good call. The phone’s ringing, business is growing… but you’re still wondering: How do I measure attribution more effectively?Here’s the truth: There are plenty of tools that help track inbound leads. But your most powerful dashboard? It’s your customers.And accessing that dashboard doesn’t require complex tech or expensive software. It takes thoughtful conversations, right at the moment your customer reaches out.Now, maybe you’re thinking: “I don’t have time to create new scripts and retrain my team…”But ask yourself this instead: “Don’t I want my frontline people to connect more meaningfully with customers — and give us a competitive edge?”Especially if you’re in the service industry, targeting high-value homeowners, this is where radio truly shines.Why? Because your customer likely called more than one business. But only your business is endorsed by a trusted local radio personality.Here’s a simple but powerful line your team can use the moment that phone rings:“Thanks for calling [Business Name]—you must’ve heard us on the radio?” (Said with a smile, of course.)This isn’t “How did you hear about us?” (which every business asks). It’s confident. Proactive. Differentiating.If they say yes, great. Take notes. This is the attribution part you’ve been looking for. If they say no, also great. Now you’ve opened the door to talk about your offer and introduce the fact that your business is exclusively recommended by a radio personality they likely know and trust.Radio attribution doesn’t have to be hard. You just need to have the right conversations with your customers!Support the showLinkedIn
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Myth #6: You Can't Measure Radio
Send us Fan MailTRUTH: That’s adorable. You mean YOU don’t know how to measure radio?Just because you can’t click a dashboard doesn’t mean nothing happened.Big brands know the secret:Radio isn’t invisible — it’s just not needy. It doesn’t beg for clicks — it sparks real-world action. And smart marketers know how to track it.Here’s how advertisers measure what you think can’t be measured:- Web lift — Watch the website traffic spike after a well-placed ad. (Especially first-in-break.)- Call tracking — Unique numbers tell you who called because they heard you.- Promo codes — Why do you think every podcast ad sounds like a morning show now?- A/B testing — Run in Market A, don’t run in Market B. Count the difference.- Attribution tools — Platforms like LeadsRx, Veritone, and AnalyticOwl show the lift in real-time.- Customer surveys — phone, web, text, and real-time attribution questions (see my LinkedIn post “Teach Your Team to Market the Marketing”)If you’re still saying radio can’t be measured, you’re not exposing a weakness in the medium — you’re exposing a weakness in your toolkit.So next time someone shrugs and says, “I mean, how do you even know if radio worked?”Just smile and say:“We checked. The traffic surged. The phone rang. The ad budget got renewed. Any other questions?"Support the showLinkedIn
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Myth #5: “Digital music discovery is better because I control everything.”
Send us Fan MailMYTH: “Digital music discovery is better because I control everything.”TRUTH: When it comes to music discovery, total control is overrated.There’s a special joy in not knowing what’s coming next … and loving it anyway.That’s what radio delivers:A curated moment. A surprise song. A story that hits home.And the sense that you’re not the only one hearing it.Radio isn’t just music — it’s companionship.It’s a shared soundtrack across a community — a neighborhood, a city, the world — all tuned into something special, together.Digital is self-serve and, over time, can become a rather lonely experience.Radio is crowd-delivered, a reminder that we’re part of something bigger, even when we’re alone.In a world full of custom playlists and infinite skip buttons, radio is that friend who dares to say: “Trust me. You’re going to love this.”— -No Bluetooth. No Wi-Fi. No Data Plan.Just music, news, sports, weather… and maybe a guy ranting about potholes.All delivered invisibly through the air.That’s AM/FM radio.Still the only mass medium that works in your car, your cabin, your basement, or during a total blackout.No cables. No buffering. No “Terms & Conditions.”You can grab a $15 transistor radio, pop in a couple of AAs (or crank the handle), turn a dial—and boom: real-time content, delivered by nothing more than magic and physics.It’s easy to take for granted—until everything else stops working. When Hurricane Katrina hit, cell towers collapsed, and power was out for weeks. But local radio stayed on the air, powered by generators. Stations became lifelines, broadcasting shelter locations, rescue info, and messages from missing loved ones. In the early hours of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, radio stations became the go-to source for updates as internet access buckled. Many Ukrainians kept small radios by their side, relying on them when phone service disappeared. After the 2003 Northeast blackout, which knocked out power to over 50 million people, people didn’t turn to the internet.They turned to the radio - tuned into car stereos and battery powered sets - to figure out what just happened.Radio doesn’t require a monthly bill. It doesn’t ask you to accept cookies. It doesn’t freeze when the cloud service glitches.It just works—every day, especially when it matters most.In a world where tech keeps getting more fragile and complicated…Radio remains simple. Reliable. And oddly magical.Sometimes the most powerful tool is the one that’s quietly worked all along. It’s not just retro. It’s resilient. Future-proof. Indispensable.Support the showLinkedIn
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Myth #4: If It’s Not Shiny and New, It’s Not Viable
Send us Fan MailTRUTH: The Wheel Is Still Pretty Viable!10 Technologies That Went Extinct While Radio Didn’t.Over the last 25 years, we’ve watched essential innovationscollapse under the weight of progress, one after the other.1. Fax Machines- Replaced by email, PDFs, and digital signatures.- While fax lost its purpose, radio expanded its purpose —reaching us on apps, smart speakers, car dashboards, and stillin our ears every day.2. Video Rental Stores- Killed by Netflix and on-demand culture.- Unlike Blockbuster, radio embraced digital: podcasting,streaming, and content on-demand without losing its live, localidentity.3. The iPod- Its single-purpose utility got absorbed into smartphones.- Radio isn’t just music. It’s news, personality, real-timerelevance — a multi-purpose platform that tech can’t just“absorb.”4. Pagers- Then cell phones arrived. Game over.- Mobile didn’t kill radio - it gave it wings. Your favoritestation is now in your pocket 24/7.5. Encyclopedia Britannica in Print- The internet made it obsolete overnight.- While Britannica became a static relic, radio thrives onimmediacy - updating by the minute, not the edition.6. CDsFrom million-sellers to bargain-bin leftovers.- Streaming changed the way we consume music forever.- People still crave curation, personality, surprise — radiodelivers what algorithms can’t: live, local humanness.7. CamcordersUsed to be in every family’s travel bag.- Smartphones made them redundant.- Radio isn’t a one-function gadget. It’s live, emotional,connective, and not something you can replace with an app.8. Landlines- Mobile phones made them irrelevant.- Radio didn’t cling to hardware — it evolved with the hardware.In cars, phones, homes, and wearables - availableeverywhere you go.9. PalmPilot / PDA- A brilliant idea that didn’t scale.- Radio scaled beautifully. It went from local towers to globalreach, while staying rooted in communities.10. MySpace- Outpaced by better UX, smarter networks, and Facebook’sdominance.- Radio keeps reinventing — new formats, new talent, newways to listen - without ever losing its core: real-time humanconnection.All these technologies were big, beloved. But none of them coulddo what radio did:- Adapt- Evolve- Stay relevant- Stay humanRadio isn’t dying. It is doubling down on live connection, localtrust, and multi-platform access.Time to celebrate radio’s incredible wheel-like ability to outliveall comers!Support the showLinkedIn
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Myth # 3: You Get What You Pay For
Send us Fan MailMYTH: You Get What You Pay ForTRUTH: Free Never Sounded So Good!Isn’t it funny how this gets overlooked?On average, this month you pay:- $14.99/month to stream music without ads- $10.99/month for ad-free podcasts- $65/month for cable- $85/month for high-speed internet so you can stream andscrollNot to mention whatever it costs in sanity to find your password.All that… just to be entertained and informed.But radio?- It’s live- It’s local- It’s human- It’s original- It’s on in your car, in your kitchen, on your job site, in yourearbuds- And it’s 100% freeNo fees.No subscriptions.No buffering.No “We use cookies to track your every move” pop-ups.No wonder radio reaches a larger global listening audience thanany other audio platform, every day!And what does it take to make that “free” magic happen?- A team of paid professionals waking up at 3:30 am to prepareyour favorite morning show- Local newsrooms gathering real-time information, verify-ing facts, and staying on-call during emergencies- Engineers and techs who ensure a flawless signal from thestudio to the transmitter to every speaker in town- Music directors and programmers curating formats thatmatch your mood, your moment, and your lifestyle- And sales and support teams behind the scenes, keeping thelights on so the content you love can STAY freeRadio may be free for the user, but it’s powered by a paid staffof passionate, professional, hard-working humans who stillbelieve that serving your community is worth showing up for.Radio isn’t outdated.It’s under-celebrated.Let’s face it. With Radio, free never sounded so good!Support the showLinkedIn
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Myth #2: The Biggest Challenge Facing Radio Managers and Sellers Today is Hitting Budget
Send us Fan MailMYTH: The Biggest Challenge Facing Radio Managers and Sellers Today is Hitting Budget.TRUTH: The #1 Challenge Facing Radio Managers and Sellers Today is Redefining the Value of Radio in a Fragmented Media Landscape! As Radio managers, we aren’t just leading clusters - we’re leading transformation. Advertisers today aren’t just choosing between stations … they're choosing between platforms, dashboards, algorithms, and influencers. So, the question becomes: How do we prove that radio still delivers what no other platform can? - Mass reach with local intimacy - Trust built through human connection - Local Talent who can move people and product - A physical presence in the community, not just a digital presence online The job now isn’t to protect radio’s past. It’s to build its future - with teams that sell smarter, strategize like marketers, and think like media agencies, with words that correct faulty thinking. If you're a Market VP, DOS, AE right now, what’s helping you meet the challenge? Let’s help debunk another myth for your sellers.Support the showLinkedIn
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Myth #1: Nobody Listens to the Radio Anymore
Send us Fan MailMYTH: Nobody Listens to the Radio AnymoreTRUTH: Radio Isn’t Old. It’s OG. The eight dreaded words for a radio salesperson: “Does anybody even listen to the radio anymore?” No. Just your dentist. Your contractor. Your boss. Also, your Uber driver, your barista, your barber, your bartender, your neighbor, your mom, and 88% of North Americans. But hey—other than them, nobody. In the meantime, “forward-thinking” marketers are busy pouring budget into ads that get skipped, scrolled past, or worse — accidentally liked. They’re paying influencers with 412 followers and a ring light in the garage, hoping their next post pulls like a Super Bowl ad. Here’s the thing: Radio doesn’t need to go viral. It goes to work. Every. Single. Day. It’s trusted. It’s local. It’s live. It’s literally in your car while you’re driving to make a purchase.It doesn’t pretend to be trendy. It doesn’t beg for likes. It just delivers.Because Radio isn’t Old – It’s OG.Get The Truth About Radio: A Myth-Busting Guide for Today's Media Buyers and SellersSupport the showLinkedIn
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ABOUT THIS SHOW
Based on the book "The Truth About Radio: A Myth-Busting Guide for Today's Media Buyers and Sellers," the Truth About Radio podcast features short, weekly audio clips that set the record straight regarding radio myths circulating in an increasingly fragmented audio media universe.
HOSTED BY
DAVE STURGEON
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