NAB Show — Nautel releases speakers list for Radio Technology Forum
RedTech’s “Good to Great — 26 Lessons for Winning Radio in 2026” series from Ken Benson continues with a principle that runs counter to how many stations operate today. Benson, founder of P1 Media Group, argues that one of radio’s most common strategic mistakes is not a lack of ideas but a lack of patience.
Consistency builds recognition
One of the most persistent misconceptions in radio programming is that if something does not work quickly, it should be replaced. Stations launch promotions, features, or positioning ideas, then move on to something else within weeks when the expected results do not materialize immediately.
This approach ignores how audiences actually build familiarity with a brand. In today’s media environment, listeners typically spend less continuous time with any single audio service. The result is that ideas do not spread quickly through an audience. They take time. That means impact is rarely created by launching more initiatives. It is created by staying with the right ones long enough for them to register.
When a station constantly changes its focus, listeners rarely experience the same message often enough to remember it. Promotions blur together, and brand identity becomes unclear. Instead of building recognition, the station unintentionally resets the process each time a new idea replaces the previous one.
Fewer ideas, stronger execution
Stronger brands tend to take the opposite approach. Rather than introducing a constant stream of new concepts, they select a small number of initiatives that clearly express the station’s identity and then consistently support them.
That support includes promotion, repetition and consistent execution across programming, marketing and digital channels. Over time, listeners begin to associate those ideas directly with the station.
The goal is not novelty. It is recognition. In practice, that means choosing carefully which ideas deserve long-term support. Not every promotion or feature should become a signature element of the brand. But the ones that do should remain in place long enough to become familiar and expected. The discipline required is often organizational rather than creative. Teams must resist the temptation to replace an idea simply because something new appears more exciting.
Commitment creates memory
In competitive audio markets, brand memory is one of radio’s most valuable assets. Listeners return to stations that feel familiar and dependable. That familiarity rarely comes from a rapid sequence of short-lived initiatives. It comes from hearing the same ideas reinforced over time.
Stations that focus on fewer initiatives and commit to them longer are more likely to build that recognition. Those who continually chase the next idea risk losing the identity they are trying to create.
Takeaway: Strong radio brands are rarely built on a large number of initiatives. They emerge from a small set of ideas that are executed consistently and reinforced long enough for audiences to recognize them.
Previous lessons:
These stories might interest you
Broadcast Radio integrates Promo Only music downloads into Myriad playout
