Radio 1 defends strategy as Nick Grimshaw loses a million listeners

 
PA
28 May 2013
The Weekender

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Radio 1 chiefs defended the station's strategy after news that Nick Grimshaw's breakfast show has lost nearly one million listeners since he took over.

Recent figures show Grimshaw had dropped 950,000 listeners in the six months since he took over from Chris Moyles.

His latest figures are 5.78 million - the lowest since Sara Cox hosted the show in 2003 - but the BBC has said it is concentrating "on a younger demographic" after the BBC Trust demanded it focus on under-30s.

Former Radio 1 breakfast show presenter Mike Smith criticised Radio 1's strategy, telling the Radio Times: "They say they're going for a younger audience - that's just wrong. Relentlessly chasing youth is going to piss off more people than it will attract.

"I don't know why the BBC is slavishly following demographics invented by advertisers when they don't take advertising. They should target attitude, not age. Whatever age you are, chasing demographics is terrible news for listeners."

RAsio 1 chief Ben Cooper told the magazine that Radio 1 is having internal discussions about some of their DJs' playlists being available to stream or buy when they finish their shows.

He said of pursuing younger listeners: "The BBC has traditionally brought in younger audiences by playing them new music on Radio 1.

"If that stops and a generation doesn't get the BBC habit, it's almost an existential problem for the corporation. There are some fundamental questions the BBC needs to be asking itself if the Trust places that responsibility in our hands.

"The key one is - what does radio look like on a screen? Because that's where the listeners we're charged with reaching are right now."

He added: "We need to work out if we see YouTube as a competitor or a partner. I think as kids get used to playing the tracks they want on YouTube or streaming services, we'll have to focus on live events and curating tastes - I don't want to wake up to a Spotify playlist, I want a warm human voice."

He admitted: "We are having internal discussions, though, about, say, Tim Westwood's playlist being available to stream or buy when he finishes his show.

"There are problems with rights - but it's something we need to explore, even if that risks the actual radio becoming the place fewer people hear the music."

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