Commercial radio reaches 12.8 million weekly listeners, CRA reports
RedTech is running a weekly leadership and strategy series from Ken Benson, founder of P1 Media Group and a veteran programming, research and marketing executive. Across 26 lessons, Benson examines practical programming principles that help radio stations strengthen audience performance and competitive positioning.
Hire for connection, not just capability
The difference between good radio and great radio often comes down to people — not process. Strategy can shape direction, but it is talent that brings a station to life on air, between songs and across every listener touchpoint.
Hiring, then, is not a box-ticking exercise. It is a strategic decision about who represents your station in the moments that matter most. Strong resumes and technical skills matter, but they are not enough on their own. What separates effective on-air talent from forgettable voices is authenticity — a genuine connection to the music, the format and the audience.
Listeners are quick to detect insincerity. If a presenter does not believe in what they are playing, that disconnect carries through the microphone. By contrast, talent that shares the audience’s enthusiasm can translate that energy into something compelling and credible.
Stations that consistently perform well tend to prioritize this alignment. They look for people who understand the format’s culture and can communicate it naturally, rather than relying solely on technical proficiency.
Coach the craft, then allow for judgment
Once hired, talent needs structure. That includes understanding the station’s brand, the format rules and the expectations around delivery. Coaching is not optional — it is how consistency is built and maintained. But structure alone does not create standout radio. The strongest personalities are those who know when and how to move beyond the rules. That requires judgment, which only develops through experience and trust.
The role of leadership is to guide that process — to push talent to master the fundamentals, then give them the space to apply those fundamentals in a way that feels natural and distinctive.
Micromanagement limits performance. When every decision is controlled, talent becomes cautious, predictable and less engaging. By contrast, an environment built on clear expectations and trust allows personalities to take ownership of their output. This does not mean the absence of oversight. It means shifting from control to support — providing feedback, setting direction and intervening when necessary, but not dictating every move. In practice, this often determines whether a station sounds tightly managed or genuinely alive.
Leadership in this context is not about control. It is about development — identifying potential, refining it and pushing it to a higher standard. That includes challenging talent to improve, holding them accountable and backing them when it counts. It also means recognizing when to step back. If the right people are in place, they will not simply execute a vision. They will extend it.
Stations that reach this point tend to evolve faster because creativity is not centralized. It is distributed across the team.
Takeaway: Great talent does not need to be controlled. It needs to be developed, trusted and supported when it matters.
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